On the single and multiple associations of COVID‑19 post‑acute sequelae: 6‑month prospective cohort study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jiménez Rodríguez, Beatriz María; Gutiérrez Fernández, José; Ramos Urbina, Eldis María; Romero Ortiz, Ana Dolores; García Flores, Paula Isabel; Santiago Puertas, María Inmaculada; Martín‑López, Maria José; López Milena, Genaro; Fabregas, Rene; Morales García, ConcepciónEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2022-03-01Referencia bibliográfica
Jiménez Rodríguez, B.M. et. al. Sci Rep 12, 3402 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07433-8]
Resumen
Medical research is progressing to clarify the full spectrum of sub-acute and long-term effects of the
post-COVID-19 syndrome. However, most manuscripts published to date only analyze the effects
of post-COVID-19 in patients discharged from hospital, which may induce significant bias. Here, we
propose a pioneering study to analyze the single and multiple associations between post-COVID-19
characteristics with up to 6-months of follow-up in hospitalized and non-hospitalized COVID-19
patients. The cohort study was conducted from May to October 2020 at the University Hospital Virgen
de la Nieves, the leading hospital assigned for patients with COVID-19 in Granada, Spain. A total
of 372 and 217 patients—with 217 and 207 included in the first and second follow-up visits—were
referred 2 and 6 months after diagnosing COVID-19, respectively. We find out that post-COVID-19
clinical and mental health impairment symptoms are correlated with patient gender. Logistic
adjustments showed strong statistically robust single and multiple associations of demographic,
clinical, mental health, X-ray, laboratory indices, and pulmonary function variables. The functional
lung tests are good predictors of chest CT imaging abnormalities in elderly patients. Bilateral lung
involvement, subpleural reticulum, ground-glass opacity, peripheral lung lesions, and bronchiectasis
were the most common findings of the high-resolution computed tomography images. Nonhospitalized
patients suffer more severe thromboembolic events and fatigue than those hospitalized.