Cargando…

Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco

BACKGROUND: To date, more than 105,805,951 cases of COVID-19 have been diagnosed including 2,312,278 deaths. Many patients have cardiovascular risk-factors and/or co-morbidities and a lot of them developed de novo heart conditions during the active or the post-infectious phase of the infection. A nu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: El Rhalete, Abdelilah, Rhazi, Inas, Bensaid, Amine, Zaid, Ikram, Bkiyer, Houssam, Ismaili, Nabila, Elouafi, Nouha, Housni, Brahim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8053362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33898022
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102309
_version_ 1783680106442522624
author El Rhalete, Abdelilah
Rhazi, Inas
Bensaid, Amine
Zaid, Ikram
Bkiyer, Houssam
Ismaili, Nabila
Elouafi, Nouha
Housni, Brahim
author_facet El Rhalete, Abdelilah
Rhazi, Inas
Bensaid, Amine
Zaid, Ikram
Bkiyer, Houssam
Ismaili, Nabila
Elouafi, Nouha
Housni, Brahim
author_sort El Rhalete, Abdelilah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To date, more than 105,805,951 cases of COVID-19 have been diagnosed including 2,312,278 deaths. Many patients have cardiovascular risk-factors and/or co-morbidities and a lot of them developed de novo heart conditions during the active or the post-infectious phase of the infection. A number of studies tried to demonstrate an association between poor prognostic outcomes and cardiovascular comorbidities and related damages, but the quality of current evidence is still weak. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The aim of this single-center report is to describe the prevalence of cardiac injuries among our COVID-19 patients, to explore their association with survival outcomes and to demonstrate the medical care provided in our real-world setting. Our study included 610 COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit of our university hospital of whom13.77% (n = 84) presented cardiovascular injuries and which we included in this case series. RESULTS: The average age of our patients was 65 years (27–90). 60 were men (71.42%) while 24 were women (28.55%). Their average BMI was 29.7 kg/m(2). Among them, 50 had a pulmonary embolism (59.52%), 12 patients had a myocardial infarction (14.28%), 10 presented pericarditis (11.9%) and 3 developed myocarditis (3.57%). There were 6 cases of ischemia (7.14%), 2 cases of stroke (2.38%), and 1 case of decompensated heart failure (1.19%). Among our patients, 46.42% had diabetes, 32.14% had a high blood pressure, 13.09% had a chronic renal failure and 14.28% had a history of ischemic heart disease. 14 patients (16.66%) had an elevated troponin with higher levels than 1000 ng/mL. The D-dimer value was high in almost all patients (80.95%). Lung damage from COVID-19 was extensive in 27.38%, severe in 32.14%, and critical in 40.47% of enrolled cases. CT chest angiography, ECG, and cardiac ultrasound were performed to the paraclinical confirmatory exploration of cardiac damages of these patients. Medical care was based on isolation, azithromycin, vitamin C, zinc, vitamin D, salicylic acid, dexamethasone followed with methylprednisolone, and anticoagulation for all hospitalized patients. Tocilizumab was indicated for 17 patients with hyperferritinemia (20.23% of patients). The initial respiratory care of our patients required oxygen therapy using nasal cannula (7.14%) high concentration masks (33.33%), high flow nasal cannula treatment (11.9%), non-invasive ventilation (NIV) (5.95%), and mechanical ventilation (41.66%). Thrombolysis was performed in three subjects with myocardial infarction and 2 underwent angioplasty with placement of an active stent at the proximal interventricular anterior artery, which all were successful. Three massive pulmonary embolisms died despite adequate treatment. Colchicine and salicylic acid were administered for pericarditis cases. Thromboprophylaxis was indicated for all patients and was reinforced if a venous thrombotic episode was confirmed. Patients with limb ischemia underwent surgical treatment. Among the 84 patients included in our cohort, 34 (40.47%) died in intensive care unit and 50 (59.52%) had a favorable evolution. CONCLUSION: Cardiovascular involvement during COVID-19 should not be neglected and are associated with severe outcomes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8053362
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80533622021-04-19 Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco El Rhalete, Abdelilah Rhazi, Inas Bensaid, Amine Zaid, Ikram Bkiyer, Houssam Ismaili, Nabila Elouafi, Nouha Housni, Brahim Ann Med Surg (Lond) Case Series BACKGROUND: To date, more than 105,805,951 cases of COVID-19 have been diagnosed including 2,312,278 deaths. Many patients have cardiovascular risk-factors and/or co-morbidities and a lot of them developed de novo heart conditions during the active or the post-infectious phase of the infection. A number of studies tried to demonstrate an association between poor prognostic outcomes and cardiovascular comorbidities and related damages, but the quality of current evidence is still weak. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The aim of this single-center report is to describe the prevalence of cardiac injuries among our COVID-19 patients, to explore their association with survival outcomes and to demonstrate the medical care provided in our real-world setting. Our study included 610 COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit of our university hospital of whom13.77% (n = 84) presented cardiovascular injuries and which we included in this case series. RESULTS: The average age of our patients was 65 years (27–90). 60 were men (71.42%) while 24 were women (28.55%). Their average BMI was 29.7 kg/m(2). Among them, 50 had a pulmonary embolism (59.52%), 12 patients had a myocardial infarction (14.28%), 10 presented pericarditis (11.9%) and 3 developed myocarditis (3.57%). There were 6 cases of ischemia (7.14%), 2 cases of stroke (2.38%), and 1 case of decompensated heart failure (1.19%). Among our patients, 46.42% had diabetes, 32.14% had a high blood pressure, 13.09% had a chronic renal failure and 14.28% had a history of ischemic heart disease. 14 patients (16.66%) had an elevated troponin with higher levels than 1000 ng/mL. The D-dimer value was high in almost all patients (80.95%). Lung damage from COVID-19 was extensive in 27.38%, severe in 32.14%, and critical in 40.47% of enrolled cases. CT chest angiography, ECG, and cardiac ultrasound were performed to the paraclinical confirmatory exploration of cardiac damages of these patients. Medical care was based on isolation, azithromycin, vitamin C, zinc, vitamin D, salicylic acid, dexamethasone followed with methylprednisolone, and anticoagulation for all hospitalized patients. Tocilizumab was indicated for 17 patients with hyperferritinemia (20.23% of patients). The initial respiratory care of our patients required oxygen therapy using nasal cannula (7.14%) high concentration masks (33.33%), high flow nasal cannula treatment (11.9%), non-invasive ventilation (NIV) (5.95%), and mechanical ventilation (41.66%). Thrombolysis was performed in three subjects with myocardial infarction and 2 underwent angioplasty with placement of an active stent at the proximal interventricular anterior artery, which all were successful. Three massive pulmonary embolisms died despite adequate treatment. Colchicine and salicylic acid were administered for pericarditis cases. Thromboprophylaxis was indicated for all patients and was reinforced if a venous thrombotic episode was confirmed. Patients with limb ischemia underwent surgical treatment. Among the 84 patients included in our cohort, 34 (40.47%) died in intensive care unit and 50 (59.52%) had a favorable evolution. CONCLUSION: Cardiovascular involvement during COVID-19 should not be neglected and are associated with severe outcomes. Elsevier 2021-04-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8053362/ /pubmed/33898022 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102309 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Series
El Rhalete, Abdelilah
Rhazi, Inas
Bensaid, Amine
Zaid, Ikram
Bkiyer, Houssam
Ismaili, Nabila
Elouafi, Nouha
Housni, Brahim
Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title_full Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title_fullStr Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title_full_unstemmed Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title_short Cardiovascular injuries during COVID-19 infection: A PROCESS-compliant case series from the Eastern Morocco
title_sort cardiovascular injuries during covid-19 infection: a process-compliant case series from the eastern morocco
topic Case Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8053362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33898022
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102309
work_keys_str_mv AT elrhaleteabdelilah cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT rhaziinas cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT bensaidamine cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT zaidikram cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT bkiyerhoussam cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT ismailinabila cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT elouafinouha cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco
AT housnibrahim cardiovascularinjuriesduringcovid19infectionaprocesscompliantcaseseriesfromtheeasternmorocco