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Risk factors and multidimensional assessment of long COVID fatigue: a nested case-control study, 2022, Margalit et al

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by Andy, Apr 12, 2022.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

    Messages:
    21,944
    Location:
    Hampshire, UK
    Abstract

    Background
    Fatigue is the most prevalent and debilitating long COVID symptom, however risk factors and pathophysiology of this condition remain unknown.

    We assessed risk factors for long COVID fatigue and explored its possible pathophysiology.

    Methods
    Nested case-control study in a COVID recovery clinic. Individuals with (cases) and without (controls) significant fatigue were included. We performed a multidimensional assessment evaluating various parameters, including pulmonary function tests and cardiopulmonary exercise testing, and implemented multivariable logistic regression to assess risk factors for significant long COVID fatigue.

    Results
    Total of 141 individuals were included. Mean age was 47 (SD 13) years; 115 (82%) were recovering from mild COVID-19. Mean time for evaluation was 8 months following COVID-19. Sixty-six (47%) individuals were classified with significant long COVID fatigue. They had significantly higher number of children, lower proportion of hypothyroidism, higher proportion of sore throat during acute illness and long COVID symptoms, and of physical limitation in daily activities.

    Individuals with fatigue had poorer sleep quality and higher degree of depression. They had significantly lower heart rate [153.52 (22.64) vs 163.52 (18.53), p=0.038] and oxygen consumption per Kg [27.69 (7.52) vs 30.71 (7.52), p=0.036] at peak exercise.

    The two independent risk factors for fatigue identified in multivariable analysis were peak exercise heart rate (odds ratio [OR] 0.79 per 10 beats/minute, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.65-0.96, p=0.019); and long COVID memory impairment (OR 3.76, 95% CI 1.57-9.01, p=0.003).

    Conclusions
    Long COVID fatigue may be related to autonomic dysfunction, impaired cognition and decreased mood. This may suggest a limbic-vagal pathophysiology.

    Paywall, https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/cid/ciac283/6566295
     
    Sean, Peter Trewhitt and nick2155 like this.
  2. Snow Leopard

    Snow Leopard Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    3,827
    Location:
    Australia
    "May suggest"? Just add another weasel word on top of your weasel word to make the claim even weaker.

    I really don't know why they are suggesting this without evidence.
     

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