McHarg Matthew, Wang Yujuan, Yakin Mehmet, Zeleny Alex, Caplash Sonny, Sen Hatice Nida, Kodati Shilpa
Res Sq. 2022 Jun 1:rs.3.rs-1703009. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-1703009/v1.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) systemic symptoms and sequelae have been studied extensively, but less is known about the characterization, duration, and long-term sequelae of ocular symptoms associated with COVID-19 infection. The purpose of this study was to analyze the frequency, spectrum, and duration of ocular symptoms in participants with COVID-19 infection treated in inpatient and outpatient settings. A retrospective electronic survey was distributed to NIH employees and the public who reported testing positive for SARS-CoV-2. The anonymous survey collected information on demographics, past ocular history, systemic COVID-19 symptoms, and ocular symptoms. A total of 229 (21.9% male and 78.1% female, mean age 42.5 ±13.9) survey responses were included. Ocular symptoms were reported by 165 participants with a mean of 2.31±2.42 symptoms. The most commonly reported ocular symptoms were light sensitivity (31.0%), itchy eyes (24.9%), tearing (24.9%), eye redness (24.5%), and eye pain (24.5%). Participants with ocular symptoms had a higher number of systemic symptoms compared to participants without ocular symptoms (mean 9.17 ± 4.19 vs 6.22 ± 3.63; OR: 1.21; 95% CI: 1.11 - 1.32; p<0.001). Ocular symptoms were more common in those who reported a past ocular history compared to those who did not (81.8% vs 67.1%; OR: 2.17; 95% CI: 1.08 - 4.37; p=0.03). Additionally, the onset of ocular symptoms occurred most frequently at the same time as systemic symptoms (47.5%), and 12.6% reported symptoms lasting ≥14 days. Ocular surface-related symptoms are the most frequent ocular manifestations, and systemic disease severity is associated with the presence of ocular symptoms. Additionally, our results show that ocular symptoms can persist post-COVID-19 infection. Further work is needed to better understand ocular symptoms in COVID-19 and long-term sequelae.
2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的全身症状和后遗症已得到广泛研究,但对于与COVID-19感染相关的眼部症状的特征、持续时间和长期后遗症了解较少。本研究的目的是分析在住院和门诊环境中接受治疗的COVID-19感染参与者眼部症状的频率、范围和持续时间。对报告SARS-CoV-2检测呈阳性的美国国立卫生研究院员工和公众进行了一项回顾性电子调查。这项匿名调查收集了人口统计学、既往眼部病史、COVID-19全身症状和眼部症状等信息。共纳入229份调查回复(男性占21.9%,女性占78.1%,平均年龄42.5±13.9岁)。165名参与者报告了眼部症状,平均症状数为2.31±2.42个。最常报告的眼部症状是畏光(31.0%)、眼痒(24.9%)、流泪(24.9%)、眼红(24.5%)和眼痛(24.5%)。与无眼部症状的参与者相比,有眼部症状的参与者全身症状更多(平均9.17±4.19 vs 6.22±3.63;OR:1.21;95%CI:1.11 - 1.32;p<0.001)。与无既往眼部病史的人相比,有既往眼部病史的人眼部症状更常见(81.8% vs 67.1%;OR:2.17;95%CI:1.08 - 4.37;p=0.03)。此外,眼部症状最常与全身症状同时出现(47.5%),12.6%的人报告症状持续≥14天。眼表相关症状是最常见的眼部表现,全身疾病严重程度与眼部症状的存在有关。此外,我们的结果表明,COVID-19感染后眼部症状可能持续存在。需要进一步开展工作,以更好地了解COVID-19中的眼部症状和长期后遗症。