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A new study of over 13 million people in England has found no evidence to suggest mild COVID-19 infection may cause long-term kidney damage.
Another major difference between acute and chronic kidney disease is how doctors monitor and measure them. In AKI, doctors ...
As many as 46% of people hospitalized for COVID suffer acute kidney injury, with some requiring dialysis as their kidneys recover from infection-related damage, researchers said in background notes.
But in the immunosuppressed, it can cause a deadly hyperinfection syndrome, with the worms going through accelerating and ...