A new study found that coronavirus immunity to those previously infected was still strong 8 months later.
Understanding how the immune system remembers the coronavirus is the key to ‘improving diagnostics and vaccines, and determining the likely future course of the COVID-19 pandemic, ”the study say.
Blood samples from nearly 200 patients in the study published by the journal Science showed that it was not just the antibodies that remembered the virus. Several parts of the immune system are remembered and this memory helps a patient to quickly fight the virus when he regains COVID-19.
Coronavirus vaccinations reach millions of people in the United States, but the number of cases remains high in some parts of the country.
90 percent of the patients in the study showed that their immunity to the virus is long-lasting and strong. There are concerns about how this will apply to the new part of the coronavirus that started in the UK and has spread to several states.
The authors of the study believe that this new string will not conflict with the natural immunity you get after contracting the virus, because the new string did not mutate enough to where the human body could not recognize it.
The immune system attacks different parts of the virus when it enters the human body, and most of the parts are not affected by the new mutation we see coming from the UK.
Despite most immunity that can last up to eight months after contracting the virus, there are, according to the study, ‘different patterns of immune memory in different individuals’.
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