“It’s a very high percentage of people, and even if they’re quiet and symptom-free, they get beaten on the body so they won’t even notice,” says Dr. Eric Topol founder and director of the Scripps Translational Research Institute in La Jolla, California. Valentina Puntmann, MD, PhD, Deputy Director, Senior Clinical Investigator, Institute for Translational and Experimental Cardiovascular Imaging, DZHK Center for Cardiovascular Imaging, University of Frankfurt, Germany. Researchers whose VOCID-19 test was positive but who never felt sick saw signs of distress in the hearts and lungs of people whose VOCID-19 test was positive. In “their” hospitals, 67% of people who did not feel sick but who had an OVID-19 positive had lung changes visible on the test. They and the research team recently scanned the hearts of 100 patients who had recently recovered from OVID-19, 18 of whom were asymptomatic. They did not cough, feel shortness of breath or feel a strange range of symptoms that may portend infection with OVID-19, such as frostburn burns, skin swelling, diarrhoea or loss of smell or taste. Not all asymptomatic patients had heart markers, but some of them had some of the highest levels measured in the study. In the lungs, scientists reported white and cloudy areas in asymptomatic patients called “blurred skin”. According to Dr. Eileen Marty, Professor of Infectious Diseases at Florida International University, cloudy areas are hotbeds of inflammation. In four different studies of people with asymptomatic infections, about half of the study participants had blurred images. “We found a large group of asymptomatic patients with inflammation,” Puntman said in an email sent to WebMD. Puntmann explains that many of “his” patients easily recover from VOCID-19 and can’t move as much as they want. Two studies have shown that the same pattern is observed in children with asymptomatic VOCID-19 infection in Wuhan, China. Patients with more severe VOCID-19 infections also have clouded dirty glass. Eileen Marty, MD, Professor of Infectious Diseases and Travel Medicine, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami Eric Topol, MD, founder and director of the Scripps Broadcast Research Institute, La Hall, California; editor, Medscape.