Page 12 - IAV Digital Magazine #518
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iAV - Antelope Valley Digital Magazine
Man Dies After Getting Three-hour Erection From Coronavirus
By Nadine Carroll
A Covid-19 patient has suf- fered from a painful three-hour erection due to a rare complication of the virus.
The unidentified 69-year-old man from the US state of Ohio was diag- nosed with the condition, known as priapism, while in hospital for coronavirus in August last year.
The patient was admitted to Miami Valley Hospital and diagnosed with Covid-19. After his condition began to worsen, he was sedated and placed on a ventilator for 10 days.
When his lungs began to fail medics placed the man, described as obese, on his stomach for 12 hours - a tech-
nique used to help get air around his body.
When he was turned onto his back later that day, staff noticed he had developed an erection.
According to reports in The American Journal of Emergency Medicine doctors
believed Covid had caused blood clots the patient's penis.
Ice packs were applied to the erection for three- hours to try and reduce the swelling, but when this failed doctors resorted to draining blood from his penis using a needle,
which proved to be successful. The priapism did not return. The patient remained sedated through- out.
He was taken to the ICU and eventually died when his lungs failed to recover.
As the patient was unconscious
he could not com- municate the level of pain caused by priapism, however the condition is known to be excruciating and can cause lasting damage if left untreated.
The patient is only the second known to have had priapism after being diagnosed
with Covid. The other was a 62- year-old man in June 2020.
Experts say it makes sense the blood-related con- dition could occur as a person infected with coronavirus may experience a cytokine storm where their body's immune system goes haywire and creates blood clots, Dr. Richard Viney, a urological surgeon at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, UK, told the Daily Mail.
"In this patient, he had low flow pri- apism which would certainly fit with microemboli [little clots forming in smaller blood vessels] and this is one of the com- plications of Covid we see in many other organ systems," said Dr Viney.
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