The Scotsman

Study finds coronaviru­s causing longterm damage

● First follow-up research shows problems remain but are improving

- By CATHERINE WYLIE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Covid -19 patients can suffer long-term lung and heart damage but for many this tends to improve over time, a study suggests.

Researcher­s in the Tyrolean region of Austria recruited corona virus patients who had been admitted to hospital, and at the European Respirator­y Society Internatio­nal Congress today they report on the first 86 patients enrolled between 29 April and 9 June.

The patients were scheduled to return for evaluation six, 12 and 24 weeks after being discharged, in what is said to be the first prospectiv­e follow-up of people infected with coronaviru­s.

Clinical examinatio­ns, lab - orator y tests, analysis of the amounts of oxygen and carbon dioxide in arterial blood, and lung function tests were carried out during these visits.

At the time of their first visit, more than half of the patients had at least one persistent symptom, predominan­tly breathless­ness and coughing, and CT scans still showed lung damage in 88 per cent of patients.

But by the time of their next visit, 12 weeks after discharge, the symptoms had improved, and lung damage was reduced to 56 per cent.

A total of 56 patients (65 percent) showed persistent symptoms at the time of their six-week visit. By the 12-week visit, breathless­ness had improved and was present in 31 patients, but 13 patients were still coughing.

At this stage, it is too early to have results from the evaluation­s at 24 weeks.

Dr Sabina Sahanic, a clinical PHD student at the University Clinic in Innsbruck and part of the team that carried out the study, said: “The bad news is that people show lung impairment from C ovid -19 weeks after discharge; the good news is that the impairment tends to ameliorate over time, which suggests the lungs have a mechanism for repairing themselves.”

At the six-week visit, echocardio­grams showed that 48 patients had dysfunctio­n of the left ventricle of the heart at the point when it is relaxing and dilating.

Biological indicators of heart damage, blood clots and inflammati­on were all significan­tly elevated.

DrSa ha nic added :“Fortun at ely, in the Innsbruck cohort, we did not observe any severe coronaviru­s-associated heart dysfunctio­n in the postacute phase.”

A separate presentati­on to the congress said that the sooner Covid-19 patients started a pulmonary rehabilita­tion programme after coming off ventilator­s, the better and faster their recovery.

Ya ra Al Chi k ha nie,aPhD student at the Dieulefit Sante clinic for pulmonary rehabilita­tion and the Hp2 Lab at the Grenoble Alps University in France, used a walking test to evaluate the weekly progress of 19 patients who had spent an average of three weeks in intensive care and two weeks in a pulmonary ward before being transferre­d to a clinic for pulmonary rehabilita­tion.

She said: “The most important finding was that patients who were admitted topulmonar­y rehabilita­tion shortly after leaving intensive care progressed faster than those who remained inactive.”

 ?? PICTURE: MICHAEL GILLEN ?? 0 Covid patients were found to have persistent symptoms
PICTURE: MICHAEL GILLEN 0 Covid patients were found to have persistent symptoms

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