Artemiadis Artemios, Tofarides Andreas G, Liampas Andreas, Ioannou Christiana, Christodoulou Katerina, Louka Rafaela, Vavougios George, Zis Panagiotis, Bargiotas Panagiotis, Hadjigeorgiou Georgios
Department of Neurology, Medical School, University of Cyprus.
Department of Neurology.
Int J Rehabil Res. 2025 Mar 1;48(1):70-72. doi: 10.1097/MRR.0000000000000654. Epub 2025 Jan 9.
Approximately 10% of patients experience persistent symptoms following COVID-19, known as long-COVID syndrome. This cross-sectional study explored factors of quality of life (QoL) in 53 long-COVID patients. QoL was measured using the World Health Organization-Five Well-Being Index, fatigue with the Fatigue Visual Analogue Scale, and psychological health with the Depression-Anxiety-Stress-21 questionnaire. Six neuropsychological tests assessed information processing speed, verbal memory, visual memory, working memory, attention, language, fluency, recall, and visuospatial function with a composite score calculated by averaging z scores. Patients (76% female, mean age: 54.1 years) were assessed 8.7 months postinfection. Cognitive impairment, present in 49% of the sample, was not associated with QoL. In multiple linear regression, gender, fatigue, and psychological distress accounted for 42% of QoL variance, with fatigue and distress contributing 7% and 11%, respectively. Further studies are needed to determine if fatigue and psychological distress are causally related to QoL in long-COVID and could be treatment targets.