Non-hospitalised COVID-19 patients have more frequent long COVID-19 symptoms

A. A. R. Mohamed-Hussein,M. T. Amin,H. A. Makhlouf,N. A. Makhlouf,I. Galal, H. K. Abd-Elaal,D. Abdeltawab, K. M. S. Kholief,M. K. Hashem

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE(2021)

引用 12|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
BACKGROUND: Long COVID-19 syndrome refers to the persistence of symptoms for more than 12 weeks after the start of acute symptoms. The pathophysiology of this syndrome is not yet clear. OBJECTIVE: To assess long COVID-19 symptoms in hospitalised and non-hospitalised patients. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was used. The study included 262 patients who were divided into two groups based on their hospital admission history: 167 (63.7%) were not hospitalised, while 95 (36.3%) were hospitalised. RESULTS: Long-COVID was reported in 157 out of 262 patients (59.9%), and was significantly more frequent in non-hospitalised patients (68.3% vs. 45.3%; P < 0.001). During the acute phase, hospitalised patients had more respiratory symptoms (95.9% vs. 85.6%), while non-hospitalised patients had more neuropsychiatric symptoms (84.4% vs. 69.5%; P < 0.05). Constitutional and neuropsychiatric symptoms were the most frequently reported persistent symptoms in both groups, but all persistent symptoms were more frequent in the non-hospitalised group (P < 0.005). CONCLUSION: Long COVID-19 symptoms affect both hospitalised and non-hospitalised patients. Neuropsychiatric manifestations were the most common persistent COVID-19 symptoms. Rehabilitation and psychotherapy could be advised for all recovered COVID-19 patients. Non-hospitalised COVID-19 patients should be counselled to contact healthcare providers whenever needed.
更多
查看译文
关键词
long COVID-19, post-COVID-19, hos-pitalised, non-hospitalised
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要