(Press-News.org) The study is the largest of its kind in this population, and is published in The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health. It was led by scientists at the Universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh, and University College London, with support from the BHF Data Science Centre at Health Data Research UK.
Principal author Dr Alexia Sampri, University of Cambridge, said:
“Our whole-population study during the pandemic showed that although these conditions were rare, children and young people were more likely to experience heart, vascular or inflammatory problems after a COVID-19 infection than after having the vaccine — and the risks after infection lasted much longer.”
The research team uncovered these findings by analysing linked electronic health records (EHRs) for nearly 14 million children in England under the age of 18 between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2022, covering 98% of this population. During this period, 3.9 million children and young people had a first COVID-19 diagnosis. And 3.4 million had a first COVID-19 BNT162b2 (Pfizer–BioNTech) vaccine, the main vaccine used in 5-18-year-olds during the study period.
All personal information that could identify individuals had been stripped away, and approved researchers accessed this data entirely within the NHS England Secure Data Environment (SDE), a secure data and analysis platform.
The study looked at short- and long-term risks of rare complications including arterial and venous thrombosis (clots in blood vessels), thrombocytopenia (low levels of platelets in the blood), myocarditis or pericarditis (inflammation of the heart and its surrounding tissue respectively), and inflammatory conditions after COVID-19 diagnosis or vaccination.
After a first COVID-19 diagnosis, risks of the five conditions studied were highest in the first four weeks and, for several conditions, stayed higher for up to 12 months, compared to children and young people without or before a diagnosis.
In contrast, after COVID-19 vaccination, the team only saw a short-term higher risk in myocarditis or pericarditis in the first four weeks, compared to children and young people without or before vaccination. After that, the risk returned to the same level as the start of the study period.
Over six months, the research team estimated that COVID-19 infection led to 2.24 extra cases of myocarditis or pericarditis per 100,000 children and young people who had COVID-19. In those who were vaccinated, there were only 0.85 extra cases per 100,000 children and young people.
Previous research showed that children and young people diagnosed with COVID-19 are at a higher risk of developing conditions like myocarditis, pericarditis, and thrombocytopenia, compared to their peers who hadn’t had a COVID-19 diagnosis.
While many studies show that COVID-19 vaccines can help children to avoid severe illness and hospitalisation, some also report rare cases of myocarditis in young people shortly after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine, particularly for mRNA-based vaccines.
However, there hasn’t been any research directly comparing the longer-term risks of both COVID-19 diagnosis and vaccinations in children and young people until now.
Co-author Professor Pia Hardelid, UCL and National Institute of Health and Care Research Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre, said:
“Parents and carers have faced difficult choices throughout the pandemic. By building a stronger evidence base on both infection and vaccination outcomes, we hope to support families and healthcare professionals to make decisions grounded in the best available data.”
Co-author Professor Angela Wood, University of Cambridge and Associate Director at the BHF Data Science Centre, said:
“Using electronic health records from all children and young people in England, we were able to study very rare but serious heart and clotting complications, and found higher and longer-lasting risks after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination. Whilst vaccine-related risks are likely to remain rare and short-lived, future risks following infection could change as new variants emerge and immunity shifts. That’s why whole-population health data monitoring remains essential to guide vaccine and other important public health decisions.”
Co-author Professor William Whiteley, University of Edinburgh and Associate Director at the BHF Data Science Centre, said:
”Parents, young people, and children need reliable information to make decisions about their health. Data from hospitals and GP practices are an important part of the picture because tell us all what has happened to people looked after in the NHS. Here we have shown that during the pandemic, risks of myocarditis and inflammatory illnesses were low for children and young people, and that they were less after COVID-19 vaccination than after COVID-19 infection.”
END
Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination
Health Data Research UK news release
2025-11-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air
2025-11-05
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 00:01 GMT WEDNESDAY 05 NOVEMBER 2025
Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air
A team led by the University of Oxford has developed a new class of soft robots that operate without electronics, motors, or computers - using only air pressure. The study, published today (05 Nov) in Advanced Materials, shows that these ‘fluidic robots’ can generate complex, rhythmic movements and even automatically synchronise their actions.
Professor Antonio Forte (Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Lead of RADLab) said: “We are excited ...
The science behind people who never forget a face
2025-11-05
What is it that makes a super recogniser – someone with extraordinary face recognition abilities – better at remembering faces than the rest of us?
According to new research carried out by cognitive scientists at UNSW Sydney, it’s not how much of a face they can take in – it comes down to the quality of the information their eyes focus on.
“Super-recognisers don’t just look harder, they look smarter. They choose the most useful parts of a face to take in,” says Dr James Dunn, lead author on the research that published ...
Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’
2025-11-04
CORVALLIS, Ore. – A satellite imagery analysis shows that the 2021 “heat dome” scorched almost 5% of the forested area in western Oregon and western Washington, turning foliage in canopies from a healthy green to red or orange, sometimes within a matter of hours.
Damage to foliage leads to a range of problems for trees including reduced photosynthesis and increased vulnerability to pests and disease, scientists at Oregon State University say.
The study by researchers at OSU and ...
New effort launched to support earlier diagnosis, treatment of aortic stenosis
2025-11-04
DALLAS, November 3, 2025 — People living with aortic stenosis (AS) could gain earlier access to innovative care and treatment thanks to a new effort from the American Heart Association designed to boost clinical trial participation and speed diagnosis of this common but underdiagnosed heart valve condition.
AS is characterized by the narrowing of the aortic valve opening, which restricts blood flow from the heart to the body. Untreated, this can lead to severe complications, including heart failure and death.
The American Heart Association, devoted to changing the future to a world of healthier lives for all, is expanding its support for patients ...
Registration and Abstract Submission Open for “20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future,” 20-22 October 2026, Kyoto, Japan
2025-11-04
The International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) today announced that registration and abstract submission are open for the ISSCR International Symposium: 20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future, co-sponsored by the Japanese Society for Regenerative Medicine. The symposium will take place 20–22 October 2026 in Kyoto, Japan.
Developed in partnership with the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application (CiRA) at Kyoto University, the scientific program is chaired by Shinya Yamanaka, recipient of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the ...
Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish
2025-11-04
A new study has unexpectedly discovered that a common parasite of modern oysters actually started infecting bivalves hundreds of millions of years before the dinosaurs went extinct.
The research, published in iScience, used high-resolution 3D scans to look inside 480-million-year-old shells from a Moroccan site known for its exceptionally well-preserved sea life. The scans revealed a series of distinctive patterns etched both on the surface of the fossils and hidden inside them.
“The marks weren’t random scratches,” said Karma Nanglu, a UC Riverside paleobiologist who led the research. “We saw seven or eight of these perfect question mark shapes on each ...
Engineering a clearer view of bone healing
2025-11-04
Healing a broken bone can take months, and knowing whether recovery is on track often takes just as long. Doctors typically rely on periodic X-rays, capturing two-dimensional images to see how the bone is growing back together. Patients return for follow-up scans every few weeks or months, repeating the cycle until the bone shows signs of complete healing.
Healing of shin bone (tibia) fractures, in particular, slows or stalls up to 25% of the time. Factors such as age or underlying health conditions like diabetes can influence the speed of fracture healing. Delayed or incomplete ...
Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors
2025-11-04
As breast cancer survival rates continue to climb — 4.3 million women in the U.S. are currently living with a history of the disease and in the next 10 years that number is expected to rise by another million — heart health has become an increasingly important part of survivorship care.
Certain breast cancer therapies, while lifesaving, can also place stress on the heart, raising important questions about who might benefit from closer monitoring.
But does every breast cancer survivor need ...
Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma
2025-11-04
Moffitt Cancer Center researchers report the first clinical activity of a RAS inhibitor in patients with NRAS-mutant melanoma.
The investigational drug daraxonrasib (RMC-6236) and its preclinical counterpart RMC-7977 bind active RAS proteins (NRAS, HRAS, KRAS) and block downstream signaling that drives tumor growth, survival and immune escape.
In laboratory models, treatment led to increased infiltration of activated T cells, reduction of suppressive immune cells and tumor eradication only when the immune ...
Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods
2025-11-04
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — It doesn’t take technical expertise to work around the built-in guardrails of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini, which are intended to ensure that the chatbots operate within a set of legal and ethical boundaries and do not discriminate against people of a certain age, race or gender. A single, intuitive question can trigger the same biased response from an AI model as advanced technical inquiries, according to a team led by researchers at Penn State.
“A lot of research on AI bias has relied on sophisticated ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Asymmetric stress engineering of dense dislocations in brittle superconductors for strong vortex pinning
Shared synaptic mechanism for Alzheimer's and Parkinson’s disease unlocks new treatment possibilities
Plasma strategy boosts antibacterial efficacy of silica-based materials
High‑performance wide‑temperature zinc‑ion batteries with K+/C3N4 co‑intercalated ammonium vanadate cathodes
Prioritized Na+ adsorption‑driven cationic electrostatic repulsion enables highly reversible zinc anodes at low temperatures
Engineered membraneless organelles boost bioproduction in corynebacterium glutamicum
Study finds moral costs in over-pricing for essentials
Australian scientists uncover secrets of yellow fever
Researchers develop high-performance biochar for efficient carbon dioxide capture
Biodegradable cesium nanosalts activate anti-tumor immunity via inducing pyroptosis and intervening in metabolism
Can bamboo help solve the plastic pollution crisis?
Voting behaviour in elections strongly linked to future risk of death
Significant variations in survival times of early onset dementia by clinical subtype
Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination
Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air
The science behind people who never forget a face
Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’
New effort launched to support earlier diagnosis, treatment of aortic stenosis
Registration and Abstract Submission Open for “20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future,” 20-22 October 2026, Kyoto, Japan
Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish
Engineering a clearer view of bone healing
Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors
Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma
Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods
USC researchers use AI to uncover genetic blueprint of the brain’s largest communication bridge
Tiny swarms, big impact: Researchers engineering adaptive magnetic systems for medicine, energy and environment
MSU study: How can AI personas be used to detect human deception?
Slowed by sound: A mouse model of Parkinson’s Disease shows noise affects movement
Demographic shifts could boost drug-resistant infections across Europe
Insight into how sugars regulate the inflammatory disease process
[Press-News.org] Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccinationHealth Data Research UK news release