Syncope and presyncope in patients with COVID‐19
Autor: | Joshua Lampert, Mohit K. Turagam, Poojita Shivamurthy, Vivek Y. Reddy, Connor P. Oates, Subbarao Choudry, Marc A. Miller, Mahmoud Bokhari, Edward Chu, William Whang, Aamir Sofi, Iwanari Kawamura, Jacob S. Koruth, Srinivas R. Dukkipati, Daniel Musikantow, Noelle Langan |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Myocarditis Pneumonia Viral Comorbidity 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Syncope Coronary artery disease Betacoronavirus 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine COVID‐19 Internal medicine Humans Telemetry Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Pandemics Aged Retrospective Studies Aged 80 and over Presyncope Arrhythmias Dizziness biology SARS-CoV-2 business.industry Incidence Syncope (genus) COVID-19 Retrospective cohort study General Medicine Middle Aged medicine.disease biology.organism_classification Hospitalization Electrophysiology Coronavirus Cohort Etiology Female New York City Coronavirus Infections business Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine |
Zdroj: | Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology |
ISSN: | 1540-8159 0147-8389 |
DOI: | 10.1111/pace.14047 |
Popis: | Introduction Recent studies have described several cardiovascular manifestations of COVID‐19 including myocardial ischemia, myocarditis, thromboembolism, malignant arrhythmias etc. However, to our knowledge, syncope in COVID‐19 patients has not been systematically evaluated. We sought to characterize syncope and/or presyncope in COVID‐19 Methods This is a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients hospitalized with laboratory‐confirmed COVID‐19 with either syncope and/or pre‐syncope. This ‘study’ group (n = 37) was compared with an age and gender‐matched cohort of patients without syncope (‘control’) (n = 40). Syncope was attributed to various categories. We compared telemetry data, treatments received, and clinical outcomes between the two groups. Results Among 1,000 COVID‐19 patients admitted to the Mount Sinai Hospital, the incidence of syncope/presyncope was 3.7%. The median age of the entire cohort was 69 years (range 26 – 89+ years) and 55% were men. Major comorbidities included hypertension, diabetes and coronary artery disease. Syncopal episodes were categorized as i) unspecified in 59.4%, ii) neurocardiogenic in 15.6%, iii) hypotensive in 12.5% and iv) cardiopulmonary in 3.1% with fall vs syncope and seizure vs syncope in 2/32 (6.3%) and 1/33 (3.1%) patients respectively. Compared with the ‘control’ group, there were no significant differences in both admission and peak blood levels of d‐dimer, troponin‐I and CRP in the ‘study’ group. Additionally, there were no differences in arrhythmias or death between both groups. Conclusions Syncope/presyncope in patients hospitalized with COVID‐19 is uncommon and is infrequently associated with a cardiac etiology nor associated with adverse outcomes compared to those who do not present with these symptoms. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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