Orthostatic Symptoms and Reductions in Cerebral Blood Flow in Long-Haul COVID-19 Patients: Similarities with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Jan 21, 2022Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania)

Standing Symptoms and Reduced Brain Blood Flow in Long COVID Patients: Similarities to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

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Abstract

All long-haul COVID-19 patients developed postural tachycardia syndrome () during tilt testing.

  • There were no significant differences in symptom prevalence between long-haul COVID-19 patients and ME/CFS patients.
  • and cardiac index were significantly reduced in all patient groups compared to healthy controls.
  • The reduction in cerebral blood flow was greater in long-haul COVID-19 patients than in ME/CFS patients with a normal heart rate and blood pressure response.
  • The findings suggest a similarity in symptoms and responses to orthostatic stress between long-haul COVID-19 and ME/CFS patients.

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Key numbers

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Reduction
Comparison of reductions during tilt testing.
10 of 10
Development
All long-haul COVID-19 patients exhibited during tilt testing.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the similarities between long-haul COVID-19 patients and those with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).
  • It compares orthostatic symptoms, heart rate and blood pressure responses, and reductions during tilt testing.
  • The study includes 10 long-haul COVID-19 patients, 40 ME/CFS patients (20 with postural tachycardia syndrome and 20 without), and 20 healthy controls.

Essence

  • Long-haul COVID-19 patients exhibit symptoms and hemodynamic responses similar to ME/CFS patients. All long-haul COVID-19 patients developed () during tilt testing, with significant reductions in .

Key takeaways

  • All long-haul COVID-19 patients developed during tilt testing, indicating a significant overlap in symptoms with ME/CFS patients.
  • reductions were greater in long-haul COVID-19 patients compared to ME/CFS patients with normal heart rate and blood pressure responses.
  • The findings suggest that SARS-CoV-2 infection may trigger ME/CFS in previously healthy individuals, as evidenced by early-onset orthostatic intolerance symptoms.

Caveats

  • The study's small sample size limits the generalizability of the findings. Larger, more diverse populations need to be studied for more definitive conclusions.
  • Referral bias may have influenced participant selection, potentially over-representing patients with orthostatic symptoms.
  • The diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 in some patients was not confirmed by testing, which could affect the reliability of the findings.

Definitions

  • postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS): A condition characterized by an excessive increase in heart rate upon standing, leading to symptoms like dizziness and palpitations.
  • cerebral blood flow: The amount of blood that flows through the brain's blood vessels, crucial for delivering oxygen and nutrients.

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