City
Epaper

Covid-19 vaccines have no lasting impact on metabolic health: Study

By IANS | Updated: April 28, 2025 18:02 IST

Sydney, April 28 Covid-19 vaccines do not cause significant metabolic changes, easing concerns about potential long-term side effects, ...

Open in App

Sydney, April 28 Covid-19 vaccines do not cause significant metabolic changes, easing concerns about potential long-term side effects, according to a study on Monday.

The research led by researchers from Murdoch University in Australia followed 33 participants over 480 days, tracking 167 metabolic markers across 28 time points, Xinhua news agency reported.

The results showed no meaningful impact on key health indicators, including inflammatory markers, cardiovascular risk factors, and molecules involved in energy metabolism.

"This real-world study shows that Covid-19 vaccines are safe and don't cause significant metabolic changes," said lead author Ruey Leng Loo, Associate Professor at the varsity.

"Our findings help counter misinformation and support confidence in vaccination," Loo said.

Published in the Journal of Molecular Medicine, the research compared vaccinated participants with a control group who had never contracted Covid, as well as individuals who had experienced mild infections.

The metabolic profiles of vaccinated individuals closely matched those of the control group, further indicating that vaccines do not trigger major biological shifts, the study said.

Metabolic markers, including 34 cytokines, 112 lipoproteins, and 21 low-molecular-weight metabolites, remained largely stable post-vaccination.

While a slight, temporary increase in the inflammation-related marker Chemokine IP10 was observed after the third dose, levels remained within the normal range and returned to baseline before subsequent vaccinations, Loo said.

In contrast, even mild Covid infections were found to cause more pronounced metabolic disruptions than vaccination, she said. The expert noted that multiple doses do not produce the same biological disturbances seen after infection.

“While mild SARS-CoV-2 infections can cause more pronounced metabolic changes, the temporary fluctuations we observed after each vaccination were minor in comparison,” Loo said.

“These findings offer further reassurance to those hesitant about vaccination, demonstrating that multiple doses do not cause the same biological responses as the Covid-19 infections.

Although the results are promising, the team stressed the need for further research with larger and more diverse groups.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalTruck Collides With LED Board on Delhi-Mumbai Expressway, Explodes Into Flames, Disturbing Video Surfaces

TechnologyEarly action on AMR key to ensure infections remain treatable, surgeries stay safe: WHO 

HealthEarly action on AMR key to ensure infections remain treatable, surgeries stay safe: WHO 

BusinessExplained: New Labour Codes mark transformative step for welfare of workers

NationalBJP slams Kejriwal for failure to implement promise of Rs 1,000 to Punjab women

Health Realted Stories

HealthIndia remains firmly on track in its fight against TB: Govt

Health39 more test positive for dengue in Manipur, case tally rises to 5,166 this year

HealthIndia International Trade Fair 2025: Ayush pavilion offers free consultations, medicines

HealthWinter Weight Gain? Try These Easy 15-Minute Exercises to Stay Fit

HealthUS CDC does a U-turn on autism-vaccine link, doctors reject claims