Cerebral Hemodynamic Reserve Abnormalities Detected Via Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound in Recovered COVID-19 Patients.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Medicc Review Pub Date : 2022-01-31 DOI:10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.3
Anselmo Antonio Abdo-Cuza, Charles Hall-Smith, Juliette Suárez-López, Roberto Castellanos-Gutiérrez, Miguel Ángel Blanco-González, Rafael Machado-Martínez, Jonathan Pi-Ávila, Francisco Gómez-Peire, Namibia Espinosa-Nodarse, Juan C López-González
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Introduction: SARS-CoV-2 infection can produce endothelial injury and microvascular damage, one cause of the multiorgan failure associated with COVID-19. Cerebrovascular endothelial damage increases the risk of stroke in COVID-19 patients, which makes prompt diagnosis important. Endothelial dysfunction can be evaluated by using transcranial Doppler ultrasound to study cerebral hemodynamic reserve, but there are few of these studies in patients with COVID-19, and the technique is not included in COVID-19 action and follow-up guidelines nationally or internationally.

Objective: Estimate baseline cerebral hemodynamic patterns, cerebral hemodynamic reserve, and breath-holding index in recovered COVID-19 patients.

Method: We conducted an exploratory study in 51 people; 27 men and 24 women 20-78 years of age, divided into two groups. One group comprised 25 recovered COVID-19 patients, following clinical and epidemiological discharge, who suffered differing degrees of disease severity, and who had no neurological symptoms or disease at the time they were incorporated into the study. The second group comprised 26 people who had not been diagnosed with COVID-19 and who tested negative by RT-PCR at the time of study enrollment. Recovered patients were further divided into two groups: those who had been asymptomatic or had mild disease, and those who had severe or critical disease. We performed transcranial Doppler ultrasounds to obtain baseline and post-apnea tests of cerebral hemodynamic patterns to evaluate cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding indices. We characterized the recovered patient group and the control group through simple descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations).

Results: There were no measurable differences in baseline cerebral hemodynamics between the groups. However, cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index were lower in those who had COVID-19 than among control participants (19.9% vs. 36.8% and 0.7 vs. 1.2 respectively). These variables were similar for patients who had asymptomatic or mild disease (19.9% vs.19.8%) and for those who had severe or critical disease (0.7 vs. 0.7).

Conclusions: Patients recovered from SARS-CoV-2 infection showed decreased cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index regardless of the disease's clinical severity or presence of neurological symptoms. These abnormalities may be associated with endothelial damage caused by COVID-19. It would be useful to include transcranial Doppler ultrasound in evaluation and follow-up protocols for patients with COVID-19.

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经颅多普勒超声检测COVID-19康复患者脑血流动力学储备异常
SARS-CoV-2感染可导致内皮损伤和微血管损伤,这是导致COVID-19相关多器官衰竭的原因之一。脑血管内皮损伤增加了COVID-19患者中风的风险,因此及时诊断非常重要。经颅多普勒超声可评估内皮功能障碍,研究脑血流动力学储备,但对COVID-19患者的研究较少,且该技术未纳入国内或国际COVID-19行动及随访指南。目的:评估COVID-19康复患者的基线脑血流动力学模式、脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数。方法:我们对51人进行了探索性研究;27名男性和24名女性,年龄在20-78岁之间,分为两组。一组包括25名临床和流行病学出院后康复的COVID-19患者,他们患有不同程度的疾病严重程度,并且在纳入研究时没有神经系统症状或疾病。第二组包括26名未被诊断为COVID-19的人,他们在研究入组时通过RT-PCR检测呈阴性。康复患者进一步分为两组:无症状或轻度疾病患者和严重或危重疾病患者。我们通过经颅多普勒超声获得脑血流动力学模式的基线和呼吸暂停后测试,以评估脑血流动力学储备和呼吸保持指数。我们通过简单的描述性统计(均值和标准差)对康复患者组和对照组进行特征描述。结果:两组间基线脑血流动力学无显著差异。然而,COVID-19患者的脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数低于对照组(分别为19.9%对36.8%和0.7对1.2)。这些变量对于无症状或轻度疾病的患者(19.9% vs.19.8%)和患有严重或危重疾病的患者(0.7 vs. 0.7)相似。结论:无论临床严重程度或有无神经系统症状,SARS-CoV-2感染后康复的患者均表现为脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数下降。这些异常可能与COVID-19引起的内皮损伤有关。将经颅多普勒超声纳入COVID-19患者的评估和随访方案将是有益的。
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来源期刊
Medicc Review
Medicc Review PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
9.50%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Uphold the highest standards of ethics and excellence, publishing open-access articles in English relevant to global health equity that offer the best of medical, population health and social sciences research and perspectives by Cuban and other developing-country professionals.
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