长途感染covid-19患者嗅觉功能障碍特征

Rhinology online Pub Date : 2023-01-01
Meredith M Lamb, Kaitlyn DeHority, Sarah M Russel, Sulgi Kim, Taylor Stack, Ibtisam Mohammad, Abdullah Zeatoun, Cristine Klatt-Cromwell, Charles S Ebert, John M Baratta, Brent A Senior, Adam J Kimple
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摘要

背景:患有2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的一小部分人将经历持续三个月以上的持续症状(即长途COVID)。这包括嗅觉功能障碍(OD),目前估计1-63.5%的患者在感染后一年发生嗅觉功能障碍。然而,人们对长期感染COVID-19的个体的OD了解甚少,而且关于初始SARS-CoV-2变体如何与长期症状相关的信息也很少。在这项研究中,我们调查了长途COVID-19患者的OD患病率和严重程度,并研究了OD严重程度在SARS-CoV-2变体中的变化。方法:从北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校COVID康复诊所招募患者。每位患者都完成了宾夕法尼亚大学气味识别测试(UPSIT)。感染时的优势菌株是根据COVID-19诊断日期、疾病控制和预防中心、世界卫生组织以及北卡罗来纳州卫生和人类服务部的数据库确定的。结果:近85%的长途COVID-19患者报告了不同程度的OD,其中一些患者自首次感染之日起持续两年或更长时间。自COVID-19感染后的时间与吸毒过量的严重程度之间没有关联。基于感染时显性变异的长途COVID-19患者OD无差异(p=0.0959)。结论:绝大多数长途COVID-19患者存在一定程度的持续嗅觉并发症,尽管症状的严重程度与感染时主要的SARS-CoV-2变体无关。
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Characteristics of olfactory dysfunction in patients with long-haul covid-19.

Background: A subset of individuals suffering from Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) will experience ongoing symptoms that last longer than three months (i.e., long-haul COVID). This includes olfactory dysfunction (OD), which is currently estimated to occur in 1-63.5% of patients at one-year post-infection. However, OD in individuals with long-haul COVID-19 is poorly understood, and there is little information regarding how initial SARS-CoV-2 variants correlate with long-haul symptoms. In this study, we investigated the prevalence and severity of OD in patients with long-haul COVID-19 and investigated how OD severity varied with SARS-CoV-2 variants.

Methods: Patients were recruited from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill COVID Recovery Clinic. Each patient completed the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT). The dominant strain at the time of infection was determined using the date of COVID-19 diagnosis, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, World Health Organization, and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services databases.

Results: Nearly 85% of patients with long-haul COVID-19 reported some degree of OD, which persisted in some patients for two or more years from the date of the initial infection. There was no association between the time since COVID-19 infection and severity of OD. No difference was detected between OD in patients with long-haul COVID-19 based on the dominant variant at the time of infection (p=0.0959).

Conclusion: A vast majority of patients with long-haul COVID-19 had some degree of ongoing olfactory complications, although the severity of symptoms was not dependent on the dominant SARS-CoV-2 variant at the time of infection.

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