Wang Rong, Jia Yuanyuan, Sun Tingting, Ruan Bing, Zhou Huixuan, Yu Laikang, Hou Xiao
School of Sport Science, Beijing Sport University, Beijing 100084, China.
Key Laboratory of Sports and Physical Health Ministry of Education, Beijing Sport University, Beijing 100084, China.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Jul 30;11(15):2163. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11152163.
Few studies have identified the links between physical activity (PA), clinical symptoms, and the quality of life (QoL) among mildly infected individuals with COVID-19. This cross-sectional study aims to evaluate how PA levels before infections affect the infectious symptoms and the QoL in mildly infected patients with COVID-19.
An online questionnaire link including participants' sociodemographic and anthropometric characteristics, clinical symptoms during the COVID-19 infectious period, the QoL of the worst symptomatic day, and PA in the last seven days before COVID-19 infections was disclosed. Logistic regression and multiple linear regression analyses were applied to assess the relationships between PA levels in the last seven days before infections and COVID-19-related outcomes. The level of statistical significance was set at < 0.05.
Compared to the low-PA-level group, the moderate-PA-level group presented a higher risk of headaches (OR = 1.34, 95% CI = 1.03 to 1.75, and = 0.03) and the high-PA-level group presented a higher risk of muscle/body aches (OR = 1.42, 95% CI = 1.04 to 1.93, and = 0.03). The adjusted linear regression analysis showed that no associations were found between PA levels in the last seven days before infections and the QoL index value on the worst symptomatic day (moderate-PA-level group: β = -0.04, and = 0.08; high-PA-level group: β = -0.04, and = 0.17). However, for the mobility and usual activities dimensions of EQ-5D-5L, the lower-PA-level group had a lower burden of QoL than the higher-PA-level group did on the worst-symptomatic day.
Among mildly infected patients with COVID-19, a higher PA level is associated with a higher risk of experiencing clinical symptoms and a lower QoL.
很少有研究确定轻度感染新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)患者的身体活动(PA)、临床症状和生活质量(QoL)之间的联系。这项横断面研究旨在评估感染前的PA水平如何影响轻度感染COVID-19患者的感染症状和生活质量。
公布了一个在线问卷链接,内容包括参与者的社会人口统计学和人体测量学特征、COVID-19感染期间的临床症状、症状最严重那天的生活质量,以及COVID-19感染前最后七天的身体活动情况。采用逻辑回归和多元线性回归分析来评估感染前最后七天的PA水平与COVID-19相关结局之间的关系。统计学显著性水平设定为<0.05。
与低PA水平组相比,中等PA水平组出现头痛的风险更高(比值比[OR]=1.34,95%置信区间[CI]=1.03至1.75,P=0.03),高PA水平组出现肌肉/身体疼痛的风险更高(OR=1.42,95%CI=1.04至1.93,P=0.03)。校正线性回归分析显示感染前最后七天的PA水平与症状最严重那天的生活质量指数值之间未发现关联(中等PA水平组:β=-0.04,P=0.08;高PA水平组:β=-0.04且P=0.17)。然而,对于欧洲五维度健康量表(EQ-5D-5L)的活动能力和日常活动维度,在症状最严重那天,低PA水平组的生活质量负担低于高PA水平组。
在轻度感染COVID-19的患者中,较高的PA水平与出现临床症状的较高风险和较低的生活质量相关。