| Literature DB >> 34992721 |
Valentina L Crudo1, Ahmed I Ahmed1, Eilidh L Cowan1, Dipan J Shah1, Mouaz H Al-Mallah1, Maan Malahfji1.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a global pandemic that, at the time of this writing, has led to 178,000,000 cases worldwide and more than 3,875,000 deaths. Cardiovascular complications of COVID-19 have become the focus of investigation after many hospitalized COVID-19 patients-with or without established cardiovascular disease-incurred clinical or subclinical myocardial injury, including isolated biomarker elevations, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, heart failure, myocarditis, and cardiogenic shock. In this review, we highlight the most recent evidence of the prevalence and potential etiologies of acute and subclinical myocardial injury in COVID-19 patients. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; cardiovascular disease; coronavirus; myocardial injury; myocarditis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34992721 PMCID: PMC8680173 DOI: 10.14797/mdcvj.1038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J ISSN: 1947-6108
Summary of cardiac injury prevalence (defined as troponin elevation) in COVID-19 studies.[12,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26] ICU: intensive care unit.
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| (%) WITH ELEVATED TROPONIN | ASSAY USED | PATIENT SETTING |
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| Metkus et al.[ | 243 | 51 | Troponin I or T | ICU |
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| Giustino et al.[ | 305 | 62 | Troponin T | Inpatient |
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| Huang et al.[ | 41 | 12 | Hypersensitive troponin I | Inpatient |
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| Han et al.[ | 273 | 5.05% (outpatients) | Hypersensitive troponin I | Outpatient, inpatient, ICU |
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| Richardson et al.[ | 5,700 | 22.6 | Variety of assays | Inpatient |
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| Petrilli et al.[ | 4,103 | 11.7 | Not reported | Outpatient and inpatient |
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| Wang et al.[ | 138 | 7.2 | Troponin I | Inpatient |
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| Zhou et al.[ | 191 | 17 | High-sensitivity troponin I | Inpatient |
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| Guo et al.[ | 187 | 27.8 | Troponin T | Inpatient |
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| Shi et al.[ | 416 | 19.7 | High-sensitivity troponin I | Inpatient |
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Main findings of studies utilizing CMR in COVID-19 patients.[35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44] ECV: extracellular volume fraction; CMR: cardiac magnetic resonance; LGE: late-gadolinium enhancement; hsTNT: high-sensitivity troponin T.
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| FIRST AUTHOR, YEAR | COUNTRY | TYPE OF STUDY | NO. OF PATIENTS | RESULTS | PRIMARY END POINTS | CONCLUSION |
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| Joy[ | UK | Prospective blind study | 74 recovered patients with mild cases vs. 75 controls | No difference in end points between recovered patients and controls | Cardiac involvement 6 months after recovery from mild COVID-19 | Mild COVID-19 in healthy patients does not result in cardiovascular abnormalities. |
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| Raman[ | UK | Observational cohort study | 58 recovered patients from moderate-severe COVID-19 vs. 30 matched controls | • 26% elevated basal myocardial T1 | Cardiac involvement 2-3 months after recovery from COVID-19 | Multiorgan inflammation persists after recovery from moderate-severe COVID-19. |
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| Starekova[ | USA | Case series | 145 competitive athletes recovering from mild-moderate COVID-19 who underwent CMR 15 days after diagnosis | 1.4% had CMR findings consistent with myocarditis | Prevalence of myocardial involvement in competitive athletes recovering from COVID-19 | There is low prevalence of myocarditis in this population. |
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| Daniels[ | USA | Case series | 1,597 competitive athletes recovering from COVID-19 | 2.3% had CMR-diagnosed myocarditis, clinical and subclinical | Prevalence of myocarditis in competitive athletes recovering from COVID-19 | CMR screening in athletes recovering from COVID-19 should be considered for safe return to play. |
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| Martinez[ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 789 professional athletes with COVID-19 infection, irrespective of symptoms | 0.6% had CMR findings suggesting inflammatory heart disease | Prevalence of detectable inflammatory heart disease in professional athletes with prior COVID-19 infection | Few cases of inflammatory heart disease have been detected; safe return to play has been achieved. |
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| Kotecha[ | UK | Retrospective study | 148 patients with severe COVID-19 requiring hospitalization | 54% had LGE: | Assess myocardial injury in hospitalized COVID-19 patients after recovery | During recovery from severe COVID-19, myocarditis-like injury can be detected. Its functional consequence is not clear. |
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| Puntmann[ | Germany | Prospective observational cohort study | 100 recovered patients | • Abnormal CMR findings in 78% of recovered COVID-19 patients | Cardiac involvement after recovery from COVID-19 | CMR revealed cardiac involvement and ongoing myocardial inflammation in recovered COVID-19 patients. |
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| Huang[ | China | Retrospective study | 26 recovered patients | • 58% abnormal CMR | Cardiac involvement after recovery from COVID-19 | A proportion of recovered COVID-19 patients had cardiac involvement on CMR. |
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| Rajpal[ | USA | Case series | 26 competitive athletes with mild COVID-19 | • 15% CMR findings consistent with myocarditis | Detect cardiac involvement through CMR in competitive athletes recovering from COVID-19 | CMR may help stratify athletes recovering from COVID-19 as to risk of myocarditis. |
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| Knight[ | UK | Cross-sectional study | 828 hospitalized patients positive for COVID-19 or with a clinical diagnosis | • 586 patients had elevated hsTNT | Underlying cause of troponin elevation in COVID-19 infection | Myocardial injury detected by CMR is common in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. |
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