People who were active before becoming infected with COVID-19 might now be itching to lace up their sneakers again.
A new set of recommendations will help these recovered patients and their providers determine what cautions make sense before getting back to training.
“For athletes who had COVID-19 and are now ready to resume activity, this paper recommends a framework for cautious clinical cardiovascular evaluation in combination with cardiac biomarkers and imaging,” says author Eugene H. Chung, M.D., director of the Sports Cardiology Clinic at the Michigan Medicine Frankel Cardiovascular Center and the chair of the American College of Cardiology’s section on sports and exercise cardiology.
The new decision tree addresses what to consider for those who are COVID-19 negative (no limitations), and those with more and less severe courses of the infection. They say anyone who has COVID-19 symptoms and a positive test should stop exercising for two weeks at a minimum.
Read more at Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan
Photo Credit: Couleur via Pixabay