Department of Infectious Diseases, St James's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Department of Clinical Medicine, School of Medicine, Trinity Translational Medicine Institute, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
PLoS One. 2021 Feb 25;16(2):e0247280. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247280. eCollection 2021.
The long-term clinical and physiological consequences of COVID-19 infection remain unclear. While fatigue has emerged as a common symptom following infection, little is known about its links with autonomic dysfunction. SARS-CoV-2 is known to infect endothelial cells in acute infection, resulting in autonomic dysfunction. Here we set out to test the hypothesis that this results in persistent autonomic dysfunction and is associated with post-COVID fatigue in convalescent patients.
We recruited 20 fatigued and 20 non-fatigued post-COVID patients (median age 44.5 years, 36/40 (90%) female, median time to follow up 166.5 days). Fatigue was assessed using the Chalder Fatigue Scale. These underwent the Ewing's autonomic function test battery, including deep breathing, active standing, Valsalva manoeuvre and cold-pressor testing, with continuous electrocardiogram and blood pressure monitoring, as well as near-infrared spectroscopy-based cerebral oxygenation. 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was also conducted, and patients completed the generalised anxiety disorder-7 questionnaire. We assessed between-group differences in autonomic function test results and used unadjusted and adjusted linear regression to investigate the relationship between fatigue, anxiety, and autonomic test results.
We found no pathological differences between fatigued and non-fatigued patients on autonomic testing or on 24-hour blood pressure monitoring. Symptoms of orthostatic intolerance were reported by 70% of the fatigued cohort at the time of active standing, with no associated physiological abnormality detected. Fatigue was strongly associated with increased anxiety (p <0.001), with no patients having a pre-existing diagnosis of anxiety.
These results demonstrate the significant burden of fatigue, symptoms of autonomic dysfunction and anxiety in the aftermath of COVID-19 infection, but reassuringly do not demonstrate pathological findings on autonomic testing.
COVID-19 感染的长期临床和生理后果仍不清楚。虽然疲劳已成为感染后的常见症状,但对其与自主功能障碍的关系知之甚少。已知 SARS-CoV-2 在急性感染时会感染内皮细胞,导致自主功能障碍。在这里,我们提出了一个假设,即这会导致持续的自主功能障碍,并与恢复期 COVID-19 患者的疲劳有关。
我们招募了 20 名疲劳和 20 名非疲劳的 COVID-19 后患者(中位年龄 44.5 岁,36/40(90%)为女性,中位随访时间为 166.5 天)。疲劳使用 Chalder 疲劳量表进行评估。这些患者接受了 Ewing 自主功能测试,包括深呼吸、主动站立、瓦尔萨尔瓦动作和冷加压测试,同时进行连续心电图和血压监测,以及基于近红外光谱的脑氧合监测。还进行了 24 小时动态血压监测,患者完成了广泛性焦虑障碍 7 项问卷。我们比较了两组在自主功能测试结果上的差异,并使用未经调整和调整的线性回归来研究疲劳、焦虑与自主测试结果之间的关系。
我们发现,在自主测试或 24 小时血压监测方面,疲劳组和非疲劳组之间没有病理性差异。在主动站立时,70%的疲劳组报告有直立不耐受症状,但未发现相关的生理异常。疲劳与焦虑显著相关(p<0.001),且没有患者有预先存在的焦虑诊断。
这些结果表明 COVID-19 感染后疲劳、自主功能障碍和焦虑症状的负担很大,但令人欣慰的是,自主功能测试没有发现病理性结果。