Corona virus: A 90-Year-Old Woman Dies With Multiple Variants Of Infection.
It is possible to catch two variants of Covid simultaneously, experts warned after seeing multiple infections in a 90-year-old woman infected with the alpha and beta types first identified in the UK and South Africa. The woman who died in Belgium in March 2021 was not vaccinated. His doctor suspected two different people infected him.
They believe this is the first documented case of its kind, and although such multiple infections are rare. Your case will be discussed at this year's European Congress on Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.
In January 2021, scientists in Brazil reported that two people were simultaneously infected with two types of coronavirus, one of which is a variant of the disease called gamma. Meanwhile, researchers in Portugal recently treated a 17-year-old boy who appeared to have contracted Covid Type 2 while recovering from another pre-existing Covid infection.
The 90-year-old man, who was infected with two "fear options" - the most alarming new version of the coronavirus tracked by experts - was hospitalized after several falls but then worsened respiratory symptoms.
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Laboratory tests on samples taken while being treated found that he had Covid-19, caused by two different mutated versions of the pandemic virus, both alpha and beta.
The leading researcher, dr. Ann Wankerberchen from OLV Hospital in Aalst, Belgium, said: “Both options were circulating in Belgium at the time, so it's possible that the woman was infected with different viruses from two other people. Unfortunately, we don't know how it got infected.
"She is a woman who lives alone, but there are many maids who take care of her. "Is it difficult to say whether coinfection of the two worrying variants played a role in the patient's rapidly deteriorating condition?"