04-18-2020, 09:31 PM
In South Korea, A Growing Number
Of COVID-19 Patients Test Positive
After Recovery
April 17, 202011:23 AM ET
![[Image: ap_20108293759395_wide-3165b4fce13ec543f...00-c85.jpg]](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2020/04/17/ap_20108293759395_wide-3165b4fce13ec543fa9ee258b9be08358fa6e75e-s1100-c85.jpg)
Antibody test cartridges used in diagnosing the coronavirus move along on a
production line at Boditech Med in Chuncheon, South Korea. By Friday,
authorities had identified 163 patients who tested positive again
after a full recovery.
Lee Jin-man/AP
A growing number of recovered COVID-19 patients are
relapsing in South Korea, raising new questions and concerns
among scientists and health authorities after the country
successfully flattened the curve.
By Friday, Korean health authorities had identified 163 patients
who tested positive again after a full recovery. The number
more than doubled in about a week, up from 74 cases on April 9.
Those patients — just over 2% of the country's 7,829
recovered patients — are now back in isolation.
According to Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
data on Friday, the age and regional distribution of relapse
cases are largely in line with that of the total infections.
To find out reasons for relapse, South Korean health authorities
are running a range of tests and vetting various scenarios.
The World Health Organization said last week that it is
investigating the issue. While a fuller analysis will take at
least a few weeks, early findings suggest there can be more
than one cause.
Top KCDC officials said in recent briefings that the most
likely possibility is reactivation of remaining viruses in
patients' systems. If a patient had not developed sufficient
immunity against the virus or if a patient's immune system
weakens after recovery, the previously undetectable level of
virus concentration could rebound. Or the novel coronavirus
may be capable of staying dormant before reactivating.
Another possibility is that tests are picking up dead virus
particles that are no longer infectious or transmissible. KCDC
director-general Jeong Eun-kyeong said Friday that viruses
collected from six relapse cases could not be cultivated in
isolation, signifying that they are either dead or
too small in number.
But some relapsed patients may have living viruses that make
them sick. As of Friday, at least 61 developed symptoms, albeit mild.
A live virus is probably also transmissible, according to Jeong,
but no secondary transmission by relapsed cases has been reported.
Reinfection through another virus carrier is a less probable
scenario, considering that patients are retesting positive not
long after they are released from treatment. Jeong said on Friday
that relapse cases are detected an average of 13.5 days after recovery.
The longest reported interval, however, is 35 days.
KCDC has also mentioned errors in testing or sample collecting
as potential causes.
Short of definitive answers, authorities are for now advising recovered patients
to stay home for an additional two weeks and to monitor for symptoms.
Of COVID-19 Patients Test Positive
After Recovery
April 17, 202011:23 AM ET
![[Image: ap_20108293759395_wide-3165b4fce13ec543f...00-c85.jpg]](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2020/04/17/ap_20108293759395_wide-3165b4fce13ec543fa9ee258b9be08358fa6e75e-s1100-c85.jpg)
Antibody test cartridges used in diagnosing the coronavirus move along on a
production line at Boditech Med in Chuncheon, South Korea. By Friday,
authorities had identified 163 patients who tested positive again
after a full recovery.
Lee Jin-man/AP
A growing number of recovered COVID-19 patients are
relapsing in South Korea, raising new questions and concerns
among scientists and health authorities after the country
successfully flattened the curve.
By Friday, Korean health authorities had identified 163 patients
who tested positive again after a full recovery. The number
more than doubled in about a week, up from 74 cases on April 9.
Those patients — just over 2% of the country's 7,829
recovered patients — are now back in isolation.
According to Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
data on Friday, the age and regional distribution of relapse
cases are largely in line with that of the total infections.
To find out reasons for relapse, South Korean health authorities
are running a range of tests and vetting various scenarios.
The World Health Organization said last week that it is
investigating the issue. While a fuller analysis will take at
least a few weeks, early findings suggest there can be more
than one cause.
Top KCDC officials said in recent briefings that the most
likely possibility is reactivation of remaining viruses in
patients' systems. If a patient had not developed sufficient
immunity against the virus or if a patient's immune system
weakens after recovery, the previously undetectable level of
virus concentration could rebound. Or the novel coronavirus
may be capable of staying dormant before reactivating.
Another possibility is that tests are picking up dead virus
particles that are no longer infectious or transmissible. KCDC
director-general Jeong Eun-kyeong said Friday that viruses
collected from six relapse cases could not be cultivated in
isolation, signifying that they are either dead or
too small in number.
But some relapsed patients may have living viruses that make
them sick. As of Friday, at least 61 developed symptoms, albeit mild.
A live virus is probably also transmissible, according to Jeong,
but no secondary transmission by relapsed cases has been reported.
Reinfection through another virus carrier is a less probable
scenario, considering that patients are retesting positive not
long after they are released from treatment. Jeong said on Friday
that relapse cases are detected an average of 13.5 days after recovery.
The longest reported interval, however, is 35 days.
KCDC has also mentioned errors in testing or sample collecting
as potential causes.
Short of definitive answers, authorities are for now advising recovered patients
to stay home for an additional two weeks and to monitor for symptoms.
Semper Fidelis
![[Image: SyAa0qj.png]](https://i.imgur.com/SyAa0qj.png)
USMC
![[Image: SyAa0qj.png]](https://i.imgur.com/SyAa0qj.png)
USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit


It is Well with My Soul