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International Archives of Integrated Medicine ; 9(11):15-21, 2022.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-2126112

ABSTRACT

The new Corona virus disease (COVID-19) is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV-2). It is a highly communicable infectious disease [1]. Clinical manifestations of COVID-19 vary from asymptomatic to ARDS leading to death, it is important to differentiate between severe and non-severe cases. Early warning signs can be identified by several laboratory tests which are often expensive, time taking. Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), Creactive protein (CRP) are two simple tests that can be used as markers for clinical outcome in COVID-19 patients. The aim and objectives of the study were to correlate patients clinical severity and CRP, NLR levels and to assess direct correlation between CRP levels and NLR. 101 patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria were taken into the study. Patients are divided into mild, moderate severity based on WHO criteria and CBP, CRP were sent on the 6th/ 7th day of illness. Among the 101 patients, 93 were in mild group, 8 were in moderate group. The study group included subjects who aged between 18 years to 80 years of age. Plasma CRP levels were higher in moderate cases than in mild cases, and this difference was significant (p < 0.001). The mean NLR of moderate severity were significantly higher than those of mild cases (p-0.00003). Results showed that NLR was positively correlated with CRP levels.NLR and CRP are potential, reliable and easy-to-use predictors for deteriorating covid-19 infection. The integration of NLR and CRP may lead to improved predictions and help to triage patients at the time of hospital admission. [ FROM AUTHOR]

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