Discordance between physical and cognitive health problems over one year after critical care: Insights from severe COVID-19 patients

IF 4 3区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Journal of Nutrition Health & Aging Pub Date : 2025-03-26 DOI:10.1016/j.jnha.2025.100547
Leandro U. Taniguchi , Natalia G. Gonçalves , Naomi V. Ferreira , Laiss Bertola , Thiago J. Avelino-Silva , Murilo B. Dias , Ludhmila A. Hajjar , Wilson Jacob-Filho , Claudia K. Suemoto , Márlon J.R. Aliberti , on behalf of the CO-FRAIL Study Group EPICCoV Study Group and COVID HCFMUSP Study Group
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Abstract

Objectives

To investigate the longitudinal evolution of physical and cognitive problems after hospital discharge in survivors of severe COVID-19; to describe the co-occurrence of these health problems domains in the following year after discharge; and evaluate if results are different taking into account the use of invasive mechanical ventilation.

Design

Prospective cohort study.

Setting

A large academic medical center in Brazil.

Participants

Patients aged ≥50 years who survived hospitalization for COVID-19 requiring critical care.

Measurements

We evaluated participants’ status before hospital admission and one, three, six, nine, and twelve months after hospital discharge using validated questionnaires to measure frailty, persistent physical symptoms, and cognitive function. Clusters of physical and cognitive problems were defined using sequential analysis. Concordance was studied between different problems and trajectories, and after stratifying for use of invasive mechanical ventilation during ICU stay.

Results

We included 428 participants (median age was 63 years, 57% were male, 14% were frail before COVID-19, and 61% required mechanical ventilation). Physical and/or cognitive problems were experienced in 83% of responders at least once during follow-up, and half reported any problem even after one year. Most participants experienced health problems in a single health domain, with co-occurrence less than 9% in every assessment (Cramer’s V bias-corrected less than 0.1 in any assessment). Sequential analysis identified three clusters each of cognitive and physical trajectories, with different evolution and no concordance. Stratifying the sample based on the use of mechanical ventilation did not change the results.

Conclusions

Severe COVID-19 survivors frequently experience physical and/or cognitive problems, yet these conditions and their trajectories are discordant. Multidimensional evaluations post-ICU discharge can aid in delivering tailored rehabilitation programs.
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重症监护后一年内身体和认知健康问题的不一致性:来自 COVID-19 重症患者的启示
目的探讨重症COVID-19患者出院后身体和认知问题的纵向演变;描述这些健康问题领域在出院后第二年的共同发生情况;并在考虑有创机械通气的情况下评估结果是否不同。前瞻性队列研究。巴西大型学术医疗中心。参与者年龄≥50岁,因COVID-19住院后需要重症监护的患者。测量:我们使用有效的问卷来评估参与者入院前和出院后1、3、6、9和12个月的状态,以测量虚弱、持续的身体症状和认知功能。使用顺序分析来定义身体和认知问题群。研究了不同问题和轨迹之间的一致性,并对ICU住院期间有创机械通气的使用进行了分层。结果纳入428名参与者(中位年龄63岁,57%为男性,14%在COVID-19前体弱,61%需要机械通气)。83%的应答者在随访期间至少经历过一次身体和/或认知问题,一半的应答者在一年后仍报告有任何问题。大多数参与者在单一健康领域经历了健康问题,在每次评估中共发生率低于9%(克莱默V偏差校正在任何评估中都小于0.1)。序列分析确定了认知和身体轨迹的三个集群,每个集群具有不同的进化和不一致性。根据机械通气的使用对样本进行分层并没有改变结果。严重的COVID-19幸存者经常出现身体和/或认知问题,但这些情况及其发展轨迹并不一致。icu出院后的多维评估有助于提供量身定制的康复方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
136
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: There is increasing scientific and clinical interest in the interactions of nutrition and health as part of the aging process. This interest is due to the important role that nutrition plays throughout the life span. This role affects the growth and development of the body during childhood, affects the risk of acute and chronic diseases, the maintenance of physiological processes and the biological process of aging. A major aim of "The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging" is to contribute to the improvement of knowledge regarding the relationships between nutrition and the aging process from birth to old age.
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