A model-based spectral directional approach reveals the long-term impact of COVID-19 on cardiorespiratory control and baroreflex.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q3 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL BioMedical Engineering OnLine Pub Date : 2025-02-03 DOI:10.1186/s12938-024-01327-8
Beatrice Cairo, Francesca Gelpi, Vlasta Bari, Martina Anguissola, Pavandeep Singh, Beatrice De Maria, Marco Ranucci, Alberto Porta
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Abstract

Background: Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) patients might develop sequelae after apparent resolution of the infection. Autonomic dysfunction and baroreflex failure have been frequently reported. However, the long-term effect of COVID-19 on cardiorespiratory and cardiovascular neural controls has not been investigated with directional approaches able to open the closed-loop relationship between physiological variables.

Methods: A model-based causal spectral approach, namely causal squared coherence (CK2), was applied to the beat-to-beat variability series of heart period (HP) and systolic arterial pressure (SAP), and to the respiratory signal (RESP) acquired at rest in supine position and during active standing (STAND) in COVID-19 survivors 9 months after their hospital discharge. Patients were categorized according to their need of ventilatory support during hospitalization as individuals that had no need of continuous positive airway pressure (noCPAP, n = 27), need of continuous positive airway pressure in sub-intensive care unit (CPAP, n = 14) and need of invasive mechanical ventilation in intensive care unit (IMV, n = 8).

Results: The expected decrease of the strength of the HP-RESP dynamic interactions as well as the expected increase of the dependence of HP on SAP along baroreflex during STAND was not observed and this result held regardless of the severity of the disease, namely in noCPAP, CPAP and IMV cohorts. Regardless of the experimental condition, spectral causality markers did not vary across groups either.

Conclusions: CK2 markers, in association with an orthostatic challenge, were able to characterize the impairment of cardiorespiratory control and baroreflex in COVID-19 patients long after acute infection resolution and could be exploited to monitor the evolution of the COVID-19 patients after hospital discharge.

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来源期刊
BioMedical Engineering OnLine
BioMedical Engineering OnLine 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
79
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BioMedical Engineering OnLine is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that is dedicated to publishing research in all areas of biomedical engineering. BioMedical Engineering OnLine is aimed at readers and authors throughout the world, with an interest in using tools of the physical and data sciences and techniques in engineering to understand and solve problems in the biological and medical sciences. Topical areas include, but are not limited to: Bioinformatics- Bioinstrumentation- Biomechanics- Biomedical Devices & Instrumentation- Biomedical Signal Processing- Healthcare Information Systems- Human Dynamics- Neural Engineering- Rehabilitation Engineering- Biomaterials- Biomedical Imaging & Image Processing- BioMEMS and On-Chip Devices- Bio-Micro/Nano Technologies- Biomolecular Engineering- Biosensors- Cardiovascular Systems Engineering- Cellular Engineering- Clinical Engineering- Computational Biology- Drug Delivery Technologies- Modeling Methodologies- Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology in Biomedicine- Respiratory Systems Engineering- Robotics in Medicine- Systems and Synthetic Biology- Systems Biology- Telemedicine/Smartphone Applications in Medicine- Therapeutic Systems, Devices and Technologies- Tissue Engineering
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