Publication | Open Access
Pulmonary fibrosis 4 months after COVID-19 is associated with severity of illness and blood leucocyte telomere length
221
Citations
13
References
2021
Year
FibrosisRadiologyPulmonary PathologyAdvanced Lung DiseaseLong CovidRespiratory DiseasesLactate DehydrogenasePathologyPulmonary Fibrosis 4Blood LeucocytePulmonary FibrosisRespiratory InfectionMechanical VentilationMedicineRisk FactorsPulmonary DiseaseCovid-19Health Sciences
The risk factors for development of fibrotic-like radiographic abnormalities after severe COVID-19 are incompletely described and the extent to which CT findings correlate with symptoms and physical function after hospitalisation remains unclear. At 4 months after hospitalisation, fibrotic-like patterns were more common in those who underwent mechanical ventilation (72%) than in those who did not (20%). We demonstrate that severity of initial illness, duration of mechanical ventilation, lactate dehydrogenase on admission and leucocyte telomere length are independent risk factors for fibrotic-like radiographic abnormalities. These fibrotic-like changes correlate with lung function, cough and measures of frailty, but not with dyspnoea.
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