| Literature DB >> 33580165 |
Fei Xia1, Mingwei Zhang2, Bo Cui3, Wei An2, Min Chen2, Ping Yang2, Tao Qin2, Xiaoyang Zhou3, Yaling Liao2, Xin Xu2, Shiguo Liu2, Kuangyu Li2, Qin Zhou2, Keke Wang4, Guangxu Hu2, Ming Du2, Songrui Chen2, Yafang Zhang2, Wei Wei2, Ming Xiang5, Jianjun Zhang6.
Abstract
In less than 6 months, COVID-19 spread rapidly around the world and became a global health concern. Hypertension is the most common chronic disease in COVID-19 patients, but its impact on these patients has not been well described. In this retrospective study, 82 patients diagnosed with COVID-19 were enrolled, and epidemiological, demographic, clinical, laboratory, radiological and therapy-related data were analyzed and compared between COVID-19 patients with (29 cases) or without (53 cases) hypertension. The median age of the included patients was 60.5 years, and the cohort included 49 women (59.8%) and 33 (40.2%) men. Hypertension (31 [28.2%]) was the most common chronic illness, followed by diabetes (16 [19.5%]) and cardiovascular disease (15 [18.3%]). The most common symptoms were fatigue (55 [67.1%]), dry cough (46 [56.1%]) and fever ≥ 37.3 °C (46 [56.1%]). The median time from illness onset to positive RT-PCR test was 13.0 days (range 3-25 days). There were 6 deaths (20.7%) in the hypertension group and 5 deaths (9.4%) in the nonhypertension group, and more hypertensive patients with COVID-19 (8 [27.6%]) than nonhypertensive patients (2 [3.8%]) (P = 0.002) had at least one comorbid disease. Compared with nonhypertensive patients, hypertensive patients exhibited higher neutrophil counts, serum amyloid A, C-reactive protein, and NT-proBNP and lower lymphocyte counts and eGFR. Dynamic observations indicated more severe disease and poorer outcomes after hospital admission in the hypertension group. COVID-19 patients with hypertension have increased risks of severe inflammatory reactions, serious internal organ injury, and disease progression and deterioration.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33580165 PMCID: PMC7881102 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83295-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379