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Illustration by Juanjo Gasull for TIMEBy Jeffrey KlugerFebruary 4, 2021 5:57 AM ESTPulmonologists, emergency responders and intensive-care teams have been the point of the medical spear in battling the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. over the past 12 months, but before long, expect another group of specialists to be more engaged than ever: cardiologists. Take a nation that already eats too much, drinks too much, exercises too little and fails too often to show up for regular checkups, put them in lockdown for a year or more, and those behaviorsall of which are drivers of cardiovascular diseasewill only get worse.In a recent survey in the journal Circulation, the American Heart Association AHA predicted a surge of cardiovascular death and disease in the months and years to come as a lagging indicator of the lifestyle changes forced upon the world by the pandemic. We don ;t have a lot of well-vetted data up to the minute on the cardiovascular impact of COVID because we are living through the pandemic now, says Dr. Mitch Elkind, president of the AHA and a pr [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley tumbler[/url] ofessor of neurology and epidemiology at Columbia University. [url=https://www.stanley-cups.es]stanley cup[/url] That new data will come in the next year or two, but we are anticipating that the pandemic will have a significant impact.SARS-COV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, does on occasion infect [url=https://www.stanleycup.lt]stanley quencher[/url] and damage heart tissue directly. One study published over the summer in JAMA Cardiology, for example, found that of a sample grou
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