Publication | Open Access
A prospective study of 12-week respiratory outcomes in COVID-19-related hospitalisations
210
Citations
8
References
2020
Year
12-Week Respiratory OutcomesCovid-19 EpidemiologyDiffusion CapacityCovid-19Respiratory InfectionPublic HealthHospital EpidemiologyRadiologyLong CovidRespiratory DiseasesCovid-19 PandemicPulmonary MedicineEpidemiologyRespiratory OutcomesPulmonary PhysiologyInfectious Respiratory DiseaseMedicineEmergency MedicineCarbon Monoxide
The long-term respiratory morbidity of COVID-19 remains unclear. We describe the clinical, radiological and pulmonary function abnormalities that persist in previously hospitalised patients assessed 12 weeks after COVID-19 symptom onset, and identify clinical predictors of respiratory outcomes. At least one pulmonary function variable was abnormal in 58% of patients and 88% had abnormal imaging on chest CT. There was strong association between days on oxygen supplementation during the acute phase of COVID-19 and both DLCO-% (diffusion capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide) predicted and total CT score. These findings highlight the need to develop treatment strategies and the importance of long-term respiratory follow-up after hospitalisation for COVID-19.
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