Recovered virus patients retest positive due to 'dead' virus fragments: experts

South Korea:  April 29, 2020  https://m-en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20200429007051320


SEOUL, April 29 (Yonhap) -- South Korean health experts said Wednesday that 
recovered coronavirus patients may have tested positive again due to traces of 
virus fragments that have been inactivated.

As of Tuesday, a total of 277 people who recovered from COVID-19 have retested 
positive here, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention (KCDC).

The country's central clinical committee for emerging disease control said 
there was no live virus present in such cases, positively refuting theories 
like the virus being reactivated or reinfection.

They said that apparent reinfection cases came because fragments of the virus 
remained in their bodies and showed up in test kits.

The country currently uses a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction 
(PCR) test for the COVID-19 virus that works by finding the virus's genetic 
information, or RNA, in a sample taken from a patient.

The experts said this PCR test is sensitive enough that it can still pick up 
parts of the small amount of RNA from a cell even after the person has 
recovered from COVID-19.

"RNA fragments still can exist in a cell even if the virus is inactivated," 
they said in a press release. "It is more likely that those who tested positive 
again picked up virus RNA that has already been inactivated."

Oh Myoung-don, head of the committee, said the cases in which people retested 
positive were due to technical limits of the PCR tests.

The committee further said it is virtually impossible for the virus to be 
reactivated unless the COVID-19 virus causes chronic infections.

"The COVID-19 virus does not invade inside of the cell nucleus and combine with 
a patient's DNA," Oh said. "It means that the virus does not create chronic 
infections."

Oh further said the COVID-19 virus is different from diseases such as HIV and 
hepatitis B in which the virus stays dormant inside of a cell nucleus and later 
causes chronic infection.

Concerns have risen over chronic infections after several COVID-19 patients 
stayed in hospitals over two months before being cured.

The country reported nine more cases of the new coronavirus Wednesday, bringing 
the nation's total infections to 10,761, the KCDC said. It marked the 11th day 
in a row that the number of new infections stayed at 15 or below.

[email protected]
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to