| Literature DB >> 32574296 |
Yu Zhao1, Chong Cui1, Kun Zhang1, Jialin Liu2, Jinfu Xu3, Eric Nisenbaum4, Yixiang Huang5, Guoyou Qin6, Bing Chen1, Michael Hoffer4,7, Susan H Blanton4,8, Fred Telischi4,7, Joshua M Hare8, Sylvia Daunert9, Bhavarth Shukla10, Savita G Pahwa10, Dushyantha T Jayaweera10, Paul E Farmer11,12,13, Carlos Del Rio14, Xuezhong Liu4,8, Yilai Shu1.
Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak spread rapidly throughout the globe, with worldwide infections and deaths continuing to increase dramatically. To control disease spread and protect healthcare workers, accurate information is necessary. We searched PubMed and Google Scholar for studies published from December 2019 to March 31, 2020 with the terms "COVID-19," "2019-nCoV," "SARS-CoV-2," or "Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia." The main symptoms of COVID-19 are fever (83-98.6%), cough (59.4-82%), and fatigue (38.1-69.6%). However, only 43.8% of patients have fever early in the disease course, despite still being infectious. These patients may present to clinics lacking proper precautions, leading to nosocomial transmission, and infection of workers. Potential COVID-19 cases must be identified early to initiate proper triage and distinguish them quickly from similar infections. Early identification, accurate triage, and standardized personal protection protocols can reduce the risk of cross infection. Containing disease spread will require protecting healthcare workers.Entities:
Keywords: COVID 2019; COVID-19; Coronavirus (CoV); SARS—CoV-2; healthcare worker protection
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32574296 PMCID: PMC7248242 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Global epidemiology of COVID-19 cases. (A) Cumulative confirmed cases. (B) Cases-fatality rate. The case-fatality rate: globally 4.85%, China 4.01%, Outside of China 4.95%, Hubei Province 4.71%, Outside of Hubei province in China 0.86%. All the data comes from the WHO Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) Situation Report (Data as reported by national authorities by March 31, 2020), except the data in (B), Hubei Province and Outside of Hubei Province in China, which comes from the latest development of the COVID-19 epidemic: General Office of the National Health Council, China.
Figure 2The 10 non-China countries with the most reported cases as of April 1, 2020. All the data comes from Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases by Johns Hopkins CSSE (https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6).
Figure 3Schematic diagram of SARS-CoV-2 transmission. Red arrows indicate most common transmission; Orange arrows indicate possible routes of transmission.
Major differential diagnosis of COVID-19.
| Etiology | SARS-CoV-2 | Common respiratory viruses | Influenza virus | Bacteria/viruses |
| Illness onset characteristics | Incubation period is 1–14 days, mean 4– 6.4 days | Year round | Year round, high in winter and spring | Year round |
| Fever characteristics | Fever common on admission | 1–2 days, mostly low fever | 3–5 days, may be high fever | May be high fever |
| Clinical symptoms | Typical: Fever, dry cough, and fatigue Atypical: congestion, rhinorrhea, sore throat, myalgia, and diarrhea | Nasal congestion, rhinorrhea, sneezing, sore throat; few systemic symptoms | Severe systemic symptoms such as fever, headache, myalgia, chills, shivering | Nasal congestion, sore throat, swallowing pain, cough; systemic symptoms such as fever, fatigue/malaise |
| Infectivity | Strong, potential for pandemic | Weak, mostly distributed | Strong, potential for pandemic | Weak, mostly distributed |
| Complication | Septic shock, ARDS, acute kidney injury, disseminated intravascular coagulation, rhabdomyolysis | Rare | Pneumonia, otitis media, myocarditis, rhabdomyolysis, septic shock. | Acute sinusitis, acute otitis media, acute pharyngitis, acute bronchitis, pneumonia. |
| Diagnosis | Epidemiology, clinical symptoms, viral nucleic acid test, serological examination (IgM/IgG) | Clinical symptoms | Respiratory tract virus nucleic acid detection | Clinical symptoms |
Figure 4Suggested strategy of outpatient and emergency triage flow chart.