Thomas H. Marwick MBBS, PhD, MPH , Noah Wexler MBBS , Joel Smith MSc , Leah Wright PhD , Felicia Ho MBBS , Marc Oreto BSc , Ashleigh-Georgia Sherriff BSc , Richard Allwood BSc , Yusuke Sata MD, PhD , Stefano Manca PhD , Erin Howden PhD , Quan Huynh PhD
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Cardiac impairment has been associated with acute COVID-19 since the earliest reports of the pandemic. However, its role in postacute sequelae of COVID-19 (“long COVID”) is undefined, and many existing observations about cardiovascular involvement in postacute sequelae of COVID-19 are uncontrolled.
Objective
To compare the prevalence of cardiac dysfunction in patients with long COVID and noninfected controls from the same community and explore their association with functional capacity.
Methods
Echocardiography was used to assess cardiac structure and function, including the measurement of global longitudinal strain (GLS), in 190 participants with long COVID. All underwent assessment of functional impairment by subjective (Duke Activity Status Index) and objective tests (6-minute walk test). The 190 participants from the long COVID group were matched with those from 979 patients who underwent the same tests in the pre-COVID-19 era, using a propensity score.
Results
The 190 patients with long COVID had similar age and risk factor profiles to those of their matched controls. Left ventricular dimensions and geometry, but not diastolic parameters, were significantly altered in the long COVID group. The long COVID group had subclinical systolic dysfunction (GLS 18.5% ± 2.6% vs 19.3% ± 2.7%, P = .005), and more long COVID patients had abnormal (<16%) GLS (13% vs 8%, P = .035). The association of long COVID with abnormal GLS (odds ratio, 1.49 [1.04, 2.45]) was independent of—and had a similar or greater effect size than—age and risk factors. There was no interaction of long COVID with the association of risk factors with GLS. As expected, the long COVID group had significant subjective (<85% predicted METS; 72% vs 5%, P < .001) and objective functional impairment (29% vs 24%, P = .026), but GLS was only weakly associated with both subjective (r = 0.30, P = .005) and objective (r = 0.21, P = .05) functional impairment. The presence of long COVID was independently associated with subjective (odds ratio = 159.7 [95% CI, 61.6-414.2]) and objective functional impairment (odds ratio = 2.8 [95% CI, 1.5-5.2]).
Conclusions
Impaired GLS and left ventricular dimensions are the echocardiographic features that are overrepresented in long COVID, and this association is similar to and independent of other risk factors. Impaired GLS is weakly associated with functional impairment.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography(JASE) brings physicians and sonographers peer-reviewed original investigations and state-of-the-art review articles that cover conventional clinical applications of cardiovascular ultrasound, as well as newer techniques with emerging clinical applications. These include three-dimensional echocardiography, strain and strain rate methods for evaluating cardiac mechanics and interventional applications.