Houston Chronicle

‘Second-week crash’ can be a critical time

- By Lenny Bernstein and Ariana Eunjung Cha

During the first week she had COVID-19, Morgan Blue felt weak, with a severe backache and a fever. The symptoms did not alarm doctors at her local emergency department, however. They sent her home after she showed up at the hospital.

But on Day 8, she abruptly felt like she was choking.

“That day, I suddenly couldn’t breathe,” said the 26-year-old customer service representa­tive from Flint, Mich. An ambulance took her to the hospital, where she spent eight days, four of them in intensive care, before she recovered and was able to go home.

For people who suffer the most severe reactions to the novel coronaviru­s, the second week of the disease can become a time of sudden peril and heightened concern, when some of those who seem stable or mending can suddenly become critically ill.

There is little consensus among doctors and experts about why days five through 10, seem to be so dangerous for some people with COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

“This second-week crash has certainly been well described, but 2 ½ months in, why it happens we’re still not entirely sure,” said Ebbing Lautenbach, chief of the division of infectious diseases at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine.

Doctors report seeing patients who wait too long to seek care, including those who do not feel the symptoms of plummeting oxygen levels, such as shortness of breath, until they are in crisis.

“The people who actually crash, they’ve actually been sick a while,” said Merceditas Villanueva, an associate professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine. “They’ve underestim­ated how sick they are, or they’ve just waited.”

The virus may be killing the cells that line the air sacs of the lungs, which keep them open and allow for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide, said Russell G. Buhr, a pulmonary and critical care physician at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica, Calif.

At some point, the body simply can’t regenerate those cells as quickly as they die, he said, and a stable situation turns life-threatenin­g. That may also help explain why COVID-19 patients can linger on ventilator­s for up to four weeks, much longer than in other respirator­y diseases, he said.

Another line of thought focuses on the virus’ possible effect on the cardiovasc­ular system. Researcher­s have suggested that some crashes are caused by events such as heart attacks, strokes and clots related to blood complicati­ons.

Eytan Raz, a neurointer­ventional radiologis­t at NYU Langone Health, said one theory is that some of the blood clotting complicati­ons may be due to an over-reactive immune response.

An April 17 paper in the medical journal, the Lancet, said that COVID-19 appears to have the ability to attack the lining of blood vessels anywhere in the body. Frank Ruschitzka, a researcher from University Hospital Zurich, and his co-authors wrote that this may be why so many organs, including the lungs, kidneys and intestines, are affected in patients with severe illness.

It also could explain why people with cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes and obesity, as well as smokers, are more likely to have severe illness.

Ventilator­s themselves also may contribute to the crash, Buhr said, especially in overwhelme­d hospitals where doctors cannot spend enough time fine-tuning the devices that force oxygen into the lungs. Too much pressure on inflamed lungs can produce more of the inflammato­ry response to the coronaviru­s, worsening the clogging of air sacs called alveoli.

“We don’t like to talk about that one as much, but treatment of critically ill people is very complicate­d,” Buhr said. “Ventilator­s don’t work like meds. Adjusting the ventilator requires a lot of hands-on effort. And, in particular when hospitals are under stress, it’s much more difficult to provide that level of care.”

Hospitals have employed a number of tactics. Some are putting patients on oxygen earlier and using blood thinners prophylact­ically to prevent clots. At UCLA, caregivers more aggressive­ly monitor ventilator pressure and use proning — placing patients on their stomachs — as much as 16 hours a day, Buhr said. The technique has been shown to increase the amount of oxygen getting into the lungs of patients with acute respirator­y distress syndrome, a hallmark of severe COVID-19.

Many of these specialist­s expect to continue adjusting their approach to the disease and to the unpredicta­bility of its second week.

“There’s a lot that we don’t know,” Villanueva said.

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