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1.
European Respiratory Journal Conference: European Respiratory Society International Congress, ERS ; 60(Supplement 66), 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2270171

ABSTRACT

Post COVID-19 patients have been suffering from persistent symptoms even after long periods. The physiopathology of these clinical manifestations still has a lack of knowledge. The objective was to evaluate the total expression of metabolites and spittle biological pathways in patients with 60 days post COVID-19. We included 30 post-hospital discharge patients and we compared seven non COVID-19 patients control. All COVID-19 patients were assessed by demographic characteristics, pulmonary function, exercise capacity, quality of life and body composition. The metabolomic analysis was performed in the patient's splits. From the total of post COVID-19 patients, 66% were male, 60+/-14 years. The lean body mass was 30+/-7kg and fat mass 34+/-13kg. Spirometry mean severity showed FVC of 4+/-1L, FEV1 3+/-1L. Pimax and Pemax values were 90+/-31(cmH2O) and 97+/-31(cmH2O), respectively. The quality of life evaluated by the SGRQ questionnaire showed a mean percentage of magnitude of symptoms 32+/-15, activities 41+/-25, impact 13+/-11 and total of 24+/-15. Physical capacity was measured by the distance in the 6MWT, and presented an average of 413+/-131. The metabolomic analysis showed 19 metabolites statistically significant difference between groups. We observed 3 metabolites overexpressed and 16 with lower expression in post COVID19 patients. From those metabolites, we can have attention to Sphinganine(p=0.03), Piperenol A triacetate(p=0.02) and 1-Monopalmitin(p=0.03) were lower expressed in control group. The creatin was one of the non-expressed metabolites in post hospital discharge COVID-19 patients compared to the control group. Thus, metabolomic analysis can demonstrate different metabolites in post COVID-19 patients to answer persistent symptoms.

2.
Int J Tuberc Lung Dis ; 26(7): 629-635, 2022 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1912011

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of persistent respiratory symptoms tends to be low in patients with a longer recovery time after COVID-19. However, some patients may present persistent pulmonary abnormalities.OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence of tomographic abnormalities 90 days after symptom onset in patients with COVID-19 and compare two chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) analysis techniques.METHODS: A multicentre study of patients hospitalised with COVID-19 having oxygen saturation <93% on room air at hospital admission were evaluated using pulmonary function and HRCT scans 90 days after symptom onset. The images were evaluated by two thoracic radiologists, and were assessed using software that automatically quantified the extent of pulmonary abnormalities.RESULTS: Of the 91 patients included, 81% had at least one pulmonary lobe with abnormalities 90 days after discharge (84% were identified using the automated algorithm). Ground-glass opacities (76%) and parenchymal bands (65%) were the predominant abnormalities. Both chest HRCT technical assessments presented high sensitivity (95.9%) and positive predictive value (92%), with a statistically significant correlation at baseline (R = 0.80) and after 90 days (R = 0.36).CONCLUSION: The prevalence of pulmonary abnormalities on chest HRCT 90 days after symptom onset due to COVID-19 was high; both technical assessments can be used to analyse the images.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Lung Diseases , Humans , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Prevalence , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
3.
Rivista Italiana di Politiche Pubbliche ; 15(3):277-306, 2020.
Article in Italian | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1367712

ABSTRACT

Due to its boundary-spanning nature, the COVID-19 pandemic is a powerful stress-test for all multi-level systems of government. This holds particularly true for countries like Italy where key regulatory competencies for pandemic management are shared between State and regions, but in a context of unfulfilled federal reforms and increasing autonomist drives which hamper intergovernmental loyal cooperation. Based upon this premise, the article critically examines the development of Italian law-making and State-regions financial relations in the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. The aim is twofold: on one hand, using the pandemic as a litmus test to assess the current profile of Italian regionalism;on the other, to engage in a lesson-drawing exercise to reflect on what corrections could be considered for future reforms. © 2020 Societa Editrice il Mulino. All rights reserved.

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