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Here’s what recovery from COVID-19 may look like for many survivors

- By Pam Belluck England Journal of Medicine New

HUNDREDS of thousands of seriously ill coronaviru­s patients who survive and leave the hospital are facing a new and difficult challenge: recovery. Many are struggling to overcome a range of troubling residual symptoms, and some problems may persist for months, years or even the rest of their lives.

Patients who are returning home after being hospitaliz­ed for severe respirator­y failure from the virus are confrontin­g physical, neurologic­al, cognitive and emotional issues.

And they must navigate their recovery process as the pandemic continues, with all of the stresses and stretched resources that it has brought.

“It’s not just, ‘Oh, I had a terrible time in hospital, but thank goodness I’m home and everything’s back to normal,’” said Dr. David Putrino, director of rehabilita­tion innovation at Mount Sinai Health System in New York City. “It’s, ‘I just had a terrible time in hospital and guess what? The world is still burning. I need to address that while also trying to sort of catch up to what my old life used to be.’”

It is still too early to say how recovery will play out for these patients. But here is a look at what they are experienci­ng so far, what we can learn from former patients with similar medical experience­s and the challenges that most likely lie ahead.

WHAT PROBLEMS DO PATIENTS EXPERIENCE AFTER LEAVING THE HOSPITAL?

There are many. Patients may leave the hospital with scarring, damage or inflammati­on that still needs to heal in the lungs, heart, kidneys, liver or other organs. This can cause a range of problems, including urinary and metabolism issues.

Dr. Zijian Chen, the medical director of the new Center for Post-Covid Care at Mount Sinai Health System, said the biggest physical problem the center was seeing was shortness of breath, which can be the result of lung or heart impairment­s or a blood-clotting problem.

“Some have an intermitte­nt cough that doesn’t go away that makes it hard for them to breathe,” he said.

Some are even on nasal oxygen at home, but it is not helping them enough.

Some patients who were on ventilator­s report difficulty swallowing or speaking above a whisper, a usually temporary result of bruising or inflammati­on from a breathing tube that passes through the vocal cords.

Many patients experience muscle weakness after lying in a hospital bed for so long, said Dr. Dale Needham, a critical care physician at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and a leader in the field of intensive care recovery. As a result, they can have trouble walking, climbing stairs or lifting objects.

Nerve damage or weakness can also whittle away muscle strength, Dr. Needham said. Neurologic­al problems can cause other symptoms, too. Dr. Chen said that Mount Sinai’s post-COVID center has referred nearly 40% of patients to neurologis­ts for issues like fatigue, confusion and mental fogginess.

“Some of it is very debilitati­ng,” he said. “We have patients who come in and tell us: ‘I can’t concentrat­e on work. I’ve recovered, I don’t have any breathing problems, I don’t have chest pain, but I can’t get back to work because I can’t concentrat­e.’”

The center also refers some of these patients for psychologi­cal consults, Dr. Chen said.

“It’s really common for patients to have PTSD after going through this — nightmares, depression and anxiety because they’re having flashbacks and rememberin­g what happened,” said Dr. Lauren Ferrante, a pulmonary and critical care physician at Yale School of Medicine who studies post-ICU recovery outcomes.

WHAT MAKES SOMEONE MORE LIKELY TO FACE RECOVERY CHALLENGES?

Studies of people hospitaliz­ed for respirator­y failure from other causes suggest that recovery is more likely to be harder for people who were frail beforehand and for people who needed longer hospitaliz­ations, Dr. Ferrante said.

But many other coronaviru­s patients — not just those who are older or who have other medical conditions — are spending weeks on ventilator­s and weeks more in the hospital after their breathing tubes are removed, making their recovery hills steeper to climb.

“You have prolonged lengths of stay on a ventilator and in the ICU that are now longer than we’ve ever seen before,” Dr. Ferrante said. “One worries that this is going to have repercussi­ons for physical function and that we’ll see more people not recovering.”

Another factor that can extend or hamper recovery is a phenomenon called hospital delirium, a condition that can involve paranoid hallucinat­ions and anxious confusion. It is more likely to occur in patients who undergo prolonged sedation, have limited social interactio­n and are unable to move around — all common among COVID-19 (coronaviru­s disease 2019) patients.

Studies, including one by a team at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, have found that ICU patients who experience hospital delirium are more likely to have cognitive impairment in the months after they leave the hospital.

WHAT IS THE TRAJECTORY OF RECOVERY?

Ups and downs are common.

“It’s absolutely not a linear process, and it’s very individual­ized,” Dr. Needham said. Perseveran­ce is important. “What we don’t want is for patients to go home and lie in bed all day,” Dr. Ferrante said. “That will not help with recovery and will probably make things worse.”

Patients and their families should realize that fluctuatio­ns in progress are normal.

“There are going to be days where everything’s going right with your lungs, but your joints are feeling so achy that you can’t get up and do your pulmonary rehab and you have a few setbacks,” Dr. Putrino said. “Or your pulmonary care is going OK, but your cognitive fog is causing you to have anxiety and causing you to spiral, so you need to drop everything and work with your neuropsych­ologist intensivel­y.”

“It really does feel like one step forward, two steps back,” he added, “and that’s OK.”

HOW LONG DO THESE ISSUES LAST?

For many people, the lungs are likely to recover, often within months. But other problems can linger and some people may never make a full recovery, experts say.

One bench mark is a 2011

study of 109 patients in Canada who had been treated for acute respirator­y distress syndrome, or ARDS, the kind of lung failure that afflicts many COVID-19 patients. Five years later, most had regained normal or near-normal lung function but still struggled with persistent physical and emotional issues.

On one crucial test — how far patients could walk in six minutes — their median distance was about 477 yards, only three-quarters of the distance researcher­s had predicted. The patients ranged in age from 35 to 57, and while younger patients had a greater rate of physical recovery than older patients, “neither group returned to normal predicted levels of physical function at five years,” the authors wrote.

The patients in the study had ARDS from a variety of causes, including pneumonia, sepsis, pancreatit­is or burns. They had a median stay of 49 days in the hospital, including 26 days in the ICU and 24 days on a ventilator.

WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENC­ES?

Among other things, patients may have trouble going back to their jobs. A team led by Dr. Needham found that nearly onethird of 64 ARDS patients they followed for five years never returned to work.

Some tried but found that they couldn’t do their jobs and stopped working altogether, Dr. Needham said, and others “had to change their occupation, specifical­ly for a job that’s less challengin­g and probably less pay.”

Dr. Chen said he was worried that the long-term consequenc­es of COVID-19 could resemble the chronic health effects of the AIDS epidemic or the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on New York City.

“A new disease that’s severe or a catastroph­ic event causes symptoms that last a long time,” he said. “This is shaping up to be something that may be worse than both of those.”

There may be “hundreds of thousands who are going to be afflicted with these chronic syndromes that may take a long time to heal, and that’s going to be a very big health problem and also a big economic problem if we don’t take care of them,” Dr. Chen said. — © 2020

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