Natalie Brophy, U.S.A. TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin
Published 7: 20 p.m. CT Aug. 4,2020
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La Crosse County health authorities reported Tuesday that a homeowner has been reinfected with COVID-19, though scientists studying the infection have yet to report a case that was verified to be a reinfection, and not a flare-up of a previous infection.
According to a Facebook post from the La Crosse County Health Department, the individual first checked positive for COVID-19 more than 3 months back.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on July 22 said there had been no validated cases of COVID-19 reinfection, but scientists continue to examine the possibility.
The La Crosse County Health Department was not immediately readily available for remark Tuesday night, however health authorities did respond to concerns previously Tuesday on the department’s Facebook page.
In reaction to a Facebook remark asking whether the infection might possibly be “one long case,” the health department stated it was thinking about the case a reinfection and mentioned assistance from the CDC: “If a favorable test takes place more than 3 months after an individual’s sign onset, clinicians and public health authorities ought to consider the possibility of reinfection.”
The client’s signs “were not the exact same the 2nd time,” the health department said in action to another question, though health officials did not share what those signs are.
In a July 22 story in The New York Times, researchers said it would be very uncommon for somebody to become reinfected with COVID-19, however possible.
And individuals who have actually been contaminated with associated coronaviruses “appear to end up being prone again at around 90 days after start of infection,” according to the CDC.
A research study published in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests the antibodies produced by the immune system to combat COVID-19 might just last a few months in individuals with moderate cases. But once infected, the body immune system keeps in mind how to make fresh antibodies if required, according to a story by The Associated Press
There is likewise a growing recognition amongst researchers and doctors that it’s possible for the virus to lay inactive for months and the