The blood holds clues to understanding long COVID
The search for biomarkers could eventually lead scientists to tests and treatments
By Meghan Rosen
When I talk to immunologist Paul Morgan, he’s on the hunt for potentially life-altering drugs.
He’s got a call with a pharmaceutical company planned in the next half hour. His goal: persuade the company to supply his lab with a drug that might — maybe, hopefully, someday — ease some of the unrelenting symptoms of long COVID.
Morgan’s lab at Cardiff University in Wales has been studying people with the disease, including the first waves of patients, some of whom have been living with long COVID for more than two years (SN: 8/21/23). The “very long haulers,” he calls them. Their symptoms can include brain fog, fatigue, breathlessness and joint and muscle pain.