Antibodies from COVID-19 vaccination much higher than from infection

In a recent study published on medRxiv, researchers found people who’ve been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have a much stronger immune system response against the new coronavirus than those who’ve previously been infected.

They found vaccinated individuals had the highest antibody levels, nearly three times higher than that of convalescent individuals recovering from symptomatic COVID-19.

They also found while 99.4% of vaccinated people tested positive for COVID-fighting antibodies in blood samples just six days after their second dose of vaccine, less than 76% of people recovering from a COVID-19 infection were positive in an antibody test.

These findings might encourage people who believe they’re already well-protected because of a prior encounter with SARS-CoV-2 to go ahead and get vaccinated.

The study is from Tel Aviv University. One author is Noam Shomron.

In the study, the team assessed COVID-19 antibody levels in more than 26,000 blood samples from vaccinated and unvaccinated people, along with people who’d recovered from their COVID-19 infections.

They also found that men and women have different antibody levels after either vaccination or infection.

Among those older than 51, antibody levels were found to be higher in women than in men.

This may be related to the change in levels of the female hormone estrogen, which occurs around this age and affect the immune system.

In men, a rise in antibody levels was seen starting around 35, possibly linked to changes in levels of the male sex hormone testosterone and its effect on the immune system.

In addition, young adults had a higher level of antibodies that lasted longer compared to older vaccinated adults.

In young adults, a high concentration of antibodies is usually due to a strong immune response, while in older people it usually indicates overreaction of the immune system linked to severe illness.

The team says further research is needed to obtain an in-depth understanding of the immune system’s response to COVID-19, to recovery from the disease, and to the vaccine.

If you care about COVID, please read studies about people with this health condition have high risk of severe COVID-19 and findings of face masks can slow down COVID-19 spread, if people pay attention to these 2 things.

For more information about COVID and your health, please see recent studies about common gut inflammation linked to COVID-19 and results showing that this study identifies COVID-19 patients who recover quickly and sustain antibodies.

Copyright © 2021 Knowridge Science Report. All rights reserved.