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Emerging Insights and Future Directions in Infectious Diseases and Cardiovascular Health

Heart Cafe at ESC 2025
2:30 PM - 3:30 PM - SESSION 2
Emerging Insights and Future Directions in Infectious Diseases and Cardiovascular Health

 

Session Highlights

In this WHF Heart Café conversation, Dorairaj Prabhakaran moderates a panel with Karen Sliwa, Kavita Singh, and Sven Schellberg on the bidirectional links between infectious diseases (COVID-19, influenza, HIV) and cardiovascular disease (CVD). The discussion covers evidence on post-infection cardiovascular risk, the burden of long COVID, and pragmatic models for integrated, resilient health systems—including nurse-led teleconsultations, primary-care strengthening, and data interoperability in low- and middle-income settings.

Key takeaways

  • Infections can precipitate CVD events: Prior influenza and COVID-19 are associated with higher short-term risk of myocardial infarction and other events; people with CVD/risk factors faced ~3× higher COVID-19 mortality.
  • Long COVID is a cardiovascular issue: In a multi-country WHF cohort, 56% reported ≥1 symptom at 1 month (fatigue, dyspnea, chest pain, palpitations, anxiety); ~25% persisted at 9–12 months, with notable new diagnoses (e.g., pulmonary embolism, CKD, hypertension).
  • Endothelium & thrombosis: Omicron-era disease shows endothelial dysfunction and a pro-thrombotic milieu, helping explain late thrombotic events and some sudden deaths outside hospital.
  • Act early, at first contact: The “window of opportunity” in viral illness is short—equip nurses, CHWs, and GPs with protocols and decision support for timely assessment and treatment.
  • Integration beats silos: Intentionally embed BP/glucose checks and CVD risk management into infectious-disease pathways; use nurse-led telehealth and task-sharing to maintain chronic care during surges.
  • Systems levers: Prioritize interoperable data, medicine supply chains (e.g., insulin), patient navigation, and protection of vulnerable groups to sustain UHC goals.
  • Capacity & preparedness: Multi-country research networks build skills and evidence; keep COVID-19 learnings alive to prepare for the next pandemic.

Who should watch?

Cardiologists, GPs, nurses, public-health teams, policymakers, patient advocates, and digital-health leaders working on long COVID, thrombosis/endothelium, hypertension/diabetes programs, and integrated infectious-disease–CVD care in diverse health systems.


Infectious Diseases & CVD – FAQ

Does COVID-19 raise cardiovascular risk after recovery?
Yes. Follow-up shows persistent symptoms and elevated events (e.g., thromboembolism). Likely drivers include endothelial injury and hypercoagulability.
Who is at highest risk of complications?
Older adults and people with hypertension, diabetes, obesity, or existing CVD—but clinicians should screen broadly; risk is not confined to the “usual suspects.”
What integration works in practice?
Embed BP/glucose monitoring in infectious-disease pathways, scale nurse-led teleconsultations, task-share at primary care, and ensure interoperable data across programs.
What should front-line teams do during surges?
Use simple, early protocols at first contact; triage for thrombotic risk; maintain access to essential meds via robust supply chains; and provide clear patient navigation.
How can specialists help day-to-day?
Include vaccination and early-treatment guidance in clinic letters; flag infection control as a cardiovascular risk modifier to prompt timely GP/community action.


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