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Posted: 2021-01-28T20:57:52Z | Updated: 2021-01-28T20:57:52Z The Most Common Symptoms Of The UK COVID-19 Variant | HuffPost
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia,which closed in 2021.

The Most Common Symptoms Of The UK COVID-19 Variant

Fewer people are experiencing a loss of taste or smell, according to the ONS.

Coughs, sore throats, fatigue and muscle pain are more commonly reported symptoms of the new UK coronavirus variant, according to data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) . However, fewer people testing positive for the variant appear to be experiencing a loss of taste or smell. 

The analysis looked at swab tests taken between November 15, 2020 and January 16, 2021, when the highest percentage of positive tests associated with the new variant were seen in London and the south east of England.

Where a Covid-19 test is carried out, swabs are tested for three genes present in the coronavirus: N protein, S protein and ORF1ab. According to the ONS, absence of the S-gene in these tests appears to have become a reliable indicator of the new UK variant.

People testing positive were asked about the symptoms they’d experienced. The analysis found that loss of taste and loss of smell were significantly less common in new variant compatible positive tests.

Other symptoms, however, were more commonly associated with this variant, with the largest differences noted for cough, sore throat, fatigue, myalgia (muscle pain) and fever, as well as a small increase in headaches.

There was no evidence of any difference in the prevalence of gastrointestinal symptoms (such as sickness and diarrhoea), shortness of breath or abdominal pain.

Open Image Modal
Office for National Statistics Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey
Percentage of people with symptoms by variant, including only those who have a strong positive test, from November 15 2020 to January 16 2021, in England.

Commenting on the findings, Professor Lawrence Young, a virologist and professor of molecular oncology at the University of Warwick, acknowledged that mutations in the UK virus variant could influence the symptoms associated with infection.

“This variant is more transmissible and infected individuals appear to have higher virus loads which means they produce more virus. This could result in more widespread infection within the body perhaps accounting for more coughs, muscle pain and tiredness,” he said.

“The virus has 23 changes compared to the original Wuhan virus. Some of these changes in different parts of the virus could affect the body’s immune response and also influence the range of symptoms associated with infection.”

Professor Richard Tedder, a senior research investigator in medical virology at Imperial College London, suggested the change in symptoms, especially those of upper respiratory tract infection, i.e. coughs and colds, might also be the reason for its increased transmissibility.

“For example, if there is an increased amount of coughing and perhaps sneezing associated with a particular variant virus, these two activities can markedly increase the amount of virus which is shed into the environment, thereby making it ‘more infectious’,” he explained.

Even small changes in symptoms could influence a large change in the ease with which a virus can be transmitted between people, Prof Tedder added.

“Either way the most important feature is to remain distant from other people and wear facial covering able to reduce shedding of sneeze- and cough-generated droplets when outside the home. The old saying ‘coughs and sneezes spread diseases’ is as appropriate now as it was many decades ago.”

People are currently advised to have a test for Covid-19 if they present with one (or more) of three symptoms: a fever, new and continuous cough, or loss of sense of smell or taste.

Back in September 2020, the five most common symptoms of Covid-19 reported to the UK’s Covid Symptom Study app  were headache, fatigue, loss of smell, fever and a persistent cough.

Lead researcher Professor Tim Spector, from King’s College London, told HuffPost UK at the time that the symptoms hadn’t significantly changed since the start of the pandemic.

The Covid Symptom Study app confirmed to HuffPost UK that fatigue, headache, loss of smell, and persistent cough and sore throat are currently the most dominant symptoms of the virus.

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