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1.
COVID-19 and a World of Ad Hoc Geographies: Volume 1 ; 1:1813-1827, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2323635

ABSTRACT

This research regards the COVID-19 pandemic as a major life event with the ability to affect daily activity-travel behavior, and investigates if specific activity participation (work/study, shopping, social contact, free time) is associated with different travel modes (walk, cycle, car, public transportation), with attention paid to residential neighborhood using survey data (n = 854) in Flanders, Belgium. Through mean-comparison tests and regression analyses, evidence was found of (1) compensation for changed working/studying time with walking time, (2) compensation for changed social contact with cycling, and (3) similarly affected travel behavior regardless of residential neighborhood, though suburban residents may have more mode-resilience and less reliance on public transportation. Further evidence indicate that those working/studying may have taken advantage of decreased traffic and congestion with an increase in car and public transportation use and that older respondents may be more likely to hold flexible, teleworkable jobs and treat the pandemic with greater caution. Some travel behavior changes are expected to persist post-pandemic, therefore understanding which life domains are associated with which travel modes can inform policy aiming to decrease motorized and increase active mode use (e.g., for health or sustainability goals). © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022.

2.
HemaSphere ; 6:2679-2681, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2032097

ABSTRACT

Background: Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia (AIHA) during pregnancy is a rare finding, and few is known about maternal and foetal outcomes. AIHA may either develop or relapse during gestation and postpartum or be an issue in a patient on active therapy who becomes pregnant. AIHA management during pregnancy and lactation is not standardized and drug use is often limited by safety concerns. Aims: We studied AIHA impact on pregnancy focusing on disease severity, treatment need and maternal/foetal outcome. Methods: Through a multicentric retrospective cohort study, we identified 38 pregnancies occurred in 28 women from 1997 to 2021 in 10 European centres in Italy, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, USA, and Spain. All included patients had a previous AIHA history or developed/exacerbated AIHA during gestation or postpartum. AIHA was classified according to the direct antiglobulin test. Results: We registered 18 warm AIHA (10 IgG;8 IgG+C3d), 2 cold agglutinin disease, 3 mixed and 5 atypical forms (Table 1). Evans syndrome (i.e., association of AIHA and immune thrombocytopenia or neutropenia) was present in 4. Mean age at AIHA diagnosis was 27 (3-39) and at pregnancy 32 (21-41) years. AIHA diagnosis predated pregnancy in 15 women and had required at least 1 therapy line in all of them, and >2 lines in 12 (rituximab, N=7;cytotoxic immunosuppressants, N=6;splenectomy, N=5). Among these 15 patients, 6 had a relapse during pregnancy, 3 during postpartum and 9 were on active treatment at the time of pregnancy (steroids, N=8;cyclosporine, N=1;azathioprine, N=1;the latter stopped after positive pregnancy test). A patient with a previous AIHA, relapsed as immune thrombocytopenic purpura during pregnancy. Further 8 patients had an AIHA onset during gestation and 2 postpartum. A patient had AIHA onset during the postpartum of the 1st pregnancy and relapsed during the 2nd one. In the 20 women experiencing AIHA during pregnancy/postpartum, median Hb and LDH levels were 6,4 g/dL (3,1 - 8,7) and 588 UI/L (269-1631), respectively. Management consisted in blood transfusions (N=10) and prompt establishment of steroid therapy+/-IVIG (N=20), all with response (complete N=13, partial N=7). After delivery, rituximab was necessary in 4 patients and cyclosporine was added in one. Anti-thrombotic prophylaxis was given in 7 patients. Overall, we registered 10 obstetric complications (10/38, 26%), including 4 early miscarriages, a premature rupture of membranes, a placental detachment, 2 preeclampsia, a postpartum infection and a biliary colic. Apart from the case of biliary colic and one of the two cases of preeclampsia, 8/10 complications occurred during active haemolysis and treatment for AIHA. Nine foetal adverse events (9/38, 24%) were reported: a transitory respiratory distress of the new-born in a mother with active AIHA, 3 cases of foetal growth restriction, a preterm birth, an infant reporting neurologic sequelae, a case of AIHA of the new-born requiring intravenous immunoglobulins, blood transfusions and plasma exchange, and 2 perinatal deaths. The latter both occurred in women on active AIHA therapy and were secondary to a massive placental detachment and a symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection. (Figure Presented ) Summary/Conclusion: AIHA developing/reactivating during pregnancy or postpartum is rare (about 5%) but mainly severe requiring steroid therapy and transfusions. Importantly, severe maternal and foetal complications may occur in up to 26% of cases mostly associated with active disease, pinpointing the importance of maintaining a high level of awareness. Passive maternal autoantibodies transfer to the foetus seems a rare event.

3.
European journal of preventive cardiology ; 29(Suppl 1), 2022.
Article in English | EuropePMC | ID: covidwho-1999552

ABSTRACT

Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: Foundation. Main funding source(s): Dutch Heart Foundation Background More than 250 million cases of the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) infection were confirmed across the globe since 2020, leading to a substantial number of COVID-19 related hospital admissions. Many COVID-19 survivors experience long-term health consequences, but data on physical activity patterns and the impact on recovery post-infection are scarce. Purpose This study aimed to objectively assess physical (in)activity patterns among COVID-19 survivors and to explore the association with patient characteristics, disease severity and cardiac dysfunction. We hypothesized that COVID-19 survivors will demonstrate low volumes of physical activity and a high sedentary time, especially those with a more severe disease course (e.g. longer hospital duration;admission to intensive care), cardiac dysfunction, and persistent symptoms at 3-6 months post-discharge. Methods In this cross-sectional cohort study, we objectively assessed physical activity, sedentary behaviour and sleep duration for 24 hrs/day during 8 subsequent days in COVID-19 survivors at 3-6 months post-hospitalisation. Activity patterns were compared across pre-defined subgroups based on patient- and disease characteristics, cardiac biomarker release during hospitalisation, abnormal transthoracic echocardiogram regarding left- and right ventricular function and volumes at 3-6 months of follow-up, and persistence of symptoms post-discharge. Results Physical activity patterns were assessed in 37 patients (60±10 years old;78% male) at 125 [116;132] days after discharge. Patients spent 4.2 [3.2;5.3] hrs/day in light-intensity physical activity and 1.0 [0.8;1.4] hrs/day in moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity. Median sleep duration was 8.6 [8.2;9.1] hrs/day. Time spent sitting was 9.8 [8.7;11.2] hrs/day, which was accumulated in 6.0 [4.7;6.9] prolonged sitting bouts (≥30 min) and 41.4 [31.5;48.1] short sitting bouts (<30 min, Central Figure). No differences in activity patterns were found across subgroups, but sleep duration was slightly higher in women versus men (9.2 vs 8.5 hrs/day, p=0.03) and patients with versus without persistent symptoms (9.1 vs 8.3 hrs/day, p=0.02). Conclusions COVID-19 survivors are physically inactive for most of their time at 3-6 months post-hospitalisation. Physical (in)activity patterns are not impacted by patient- nor disease characteristics, underlining the need for a uniform approach for re-activation of COVID-19 survivors. Central Figure. A: objectively measured light-intensity physical activity (LIPA), moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity (MVPA), sleep duration and sedentary time in COVID-19 patients at 3-6 months post-hospitalisation (median and interquartile range). B: sitting bout frequency (mean + standard deviation). Central Figure

4.
Desde El Jardin De Freud-Revista De Psicoanalisis ; - (21):21-39, 2021.
Article in Spanish | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1988623

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 appeared with its quarantine and forced isolation, and psi experts were quick to make their analysis and recommendations. This essay primarily claims that, for the pandemic to offer an opportunity , to do things differently, it is necessary to think through a rigorous psychoanalytic critique not only of the psychologization, but also of the digitalization (the translation of the subjective and the intersubjective into the digital sphere) of the COVID-19 crisis. The triad of concepts obedience, indignation and uprising give us the opportunity to start this task. Therefore, we will examine the paradoxical relationship between obedience and criticism;then we will make a call for the indignation of imposed dignity;and, finally, we will proclaim that the uprising will not be digitized. Is at this point, of course, that psychoanalytic critique must open up to a political project.

5.
College and Research Libraries News ; 83(1):13-15, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1716052

ABSTRACT

With the quick shift to remote work in spring 2020 due to COVID-19, we experienced a lot of change in a short period of time that disrupted many aspects of our lives, including our working way of life. To adapt to the unexpected shift, we quickly repositioned our service models at the University of Northern Iowa Rod Library to 100% online or asynchronous. We found creative ways to increase access to our physical collections while upping the marketing of our online resources. We put our patrons’ needs before our own. © 2019 Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association.

6.
International Journal of Water Resources Development ; 38(1):173-191, 2022.
Article in English | CAB Abstracts | ID: covidwho-1655826

ABSTRACT

In 2013 the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) 'Right2Water' collected 1.9 million signatures across Europe against water privatization. It became the first ever successful ECI and has built a Europe-wide movement. Right2Water sought for Europe's legal enforcement of the Human Right to Water and Sanitation (HRWS) as a strategic political tool to challenge European Union market policies. The paper examines the ECI from a social movement perspective. Although the European Commission subscribed that 'water is a public good, not a commodity', its implementation is subject to continuing politics and socio-political struggle, with growing urgency in times of the Covid-19 pandemic crisis.

7.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology ; 156(SUPPL 1):S98-S99, 2021.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1569571

ABSTRACT

Introduction/Objective: Sarcoidosis is a syndrome of unknown cause that may manifest with clinical, radiographic and pathological findings similar to those seen with histoplasmosis. We present a case of disseminated histoplasmosis in an immunocompetent patient previously diagnosed with sarcoidosis. Methods/Case Report: A 69-year-old obese male with a history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus and long-standing sarcoidosis was admitted to the hospital for several months of intermittent fevers and pancytopenia. His sarcoidosis was diagnosed 21 years prior, initially involving the lungs and eventually showing cardiac involvement, requiring a pacemaker. He had been treated with methotrexate and prednisone. His recent medical history was also significant for COVID-19 infection, diagnosed 3 months before admission. His fevers were initially attributed to sarcoidosis and his pancytopenia to methotrexate. However, his symptoms continued despite discontinuation of his medications, and further workup was initiated. Computed tomography showed hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy, concerning for a lymphoproliferative disorder. The patient underwent a bone marrow biopsy that showed noncaseating granulomas and microorganisms consistent with histoplasmosis on fungal stain. Bone marrow cultures were not possible as the marrow was inaspirable. The patient subsequently underwent a lymph node biopsy with both morphology and culture identifying histoplasmosis. Urine and serum histoplasma antigen also returned positive. The patient's overall clinical picture was consistent with disseminated histoplasmosis and he was administered intravenous Amphotericin B for 3 weeks followed by oral itraconazole for 1 year. One month follow-up after discharge showed significant improvement in the patient's condition. Results (if a Case Study enter NA): N/A Conclusion: Sarcoidosis reduces T-cell activity, and treatment with steroids causes further immunosuppression and vulnerability for development of a disseminated infection. COVID-19 also presumably increases the predisposition to acquire bacterial or fungal co-infections. Clinicians and pathologists should be aware of the overlap in clinical, radiologic and pathological presentations of sarcoidosis and histoplasmosis to make the correct diagnosis and administer the appropriate treatment.

8.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging ; 37(12): 3459-3467, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1525550

ABSTRACT

In patients hospitalized for corona virus infectious disease 19 (COVID-19) it is currently unknown whether myocardial function changes after recovery and whether this is related to elevated cardiac biomarkers. In this single center, prospective cohort study we consecutively enrolled hospitalized COVID-19 patients between 1 April and 12 May 2020. All patients underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) evaluation during hospitalization and at a median of 131 days (IQR; 116-136) follow-up. Of the 51 patients included at baseline, 40 (age: 62 years (IQR; 54-68), 78% male) were available for follow-up TTE. At baseline, 68% of the patients had a normal TTE, regarding left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) volumes and function, compared to 83% at follow-up (p = 0.07). Median LV ejection fraction (60% vs. 58%, p = 0.54) and tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (23 vs 22 mm, p = 0.18) were comparable between hospitalization and follow-up, but a significantly lower RV diameter (39 vs. 34 mm, p = 0.002) and trend towards better global longitudinal strain (GLS) (- 18.5% vs - 19.1%, p = 0.07) was found at follow-up. Subgroup analysis showed no relation between patients with and without elevated TroponinT and/or NT-proBNP during hospitalization and myocardial function at follow-up. Although there were no significant differences in individual myocardial function parameters at 4 months follow-up compared to hospitalisation for COVID-19, there was an overall trend towards normalization in myocardial function, predominantly due to a higher rate of normal GLS at follow-up.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Communicable Diseases , Echocardiography , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Hospitalization , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies , SARS-CoV-2 , Stroke Volume
10.
Neth Heart J ; 28(7-8): 410-417, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-635095

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Previous studies have reported on myocardial injury in patients with coronavirus infectious disease 19 (COVID-19) defined as elevated cardiac biomarkers. Whether elevated biomarkers truly represent myocardial dysfunction is not known. The aim of this study was to explore the incidence of ventricular dysfunction and assess its relationship with biomarker analyses. METHODS: This cross-sectional study ran from April 1 to May 12, 2020, and consisted of all consecutively admitted patients to the Radboud university medical centre nursing ward for COVID-19. Laboratory assessment included high-sensitivity Troponin T and N­terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP). Echocardiographic evaluation focused on left and right ventricular systolic function and global longitudinal strain (GLS). RESULTS: In total, 51 patients were included, with a median age of 63 years (range 51-68 years) of whom 80% was male. Troponin T was elevated (>14 ng/l) in 47%, and a clinically relevant Troponin T elevation (10â€¯× URL) was found in three patients (6%). NT-proBNP was elevated (>300 pg/ml) in 24 patients (47%), and in four (8%) the NT-proBNP concentration was >1,000 pg/ml. Left ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction <52% and/or GLS >-18%) was observed in 27%, while right ventricular dysfunction (TAPSE <17 mm and/or RV S' < 10 cm/s) was seen in 10%. There was no association between elevated Troponin T or NT-proBNP and left or right ventricular dysfunction. Patients with confirmed pulmonary embolism had normal right ventricular function. CONCLUSIONS: In hospitalised patients, it seems that COVID-19 predominantly affects the respiratory system, while cardiac dysfunction occurs less often. Based on a single echocardiographic evaluation, we found no relation between elevated Troponin T or NT-proBNP, and ventricular dysfunction. Echocardiography has limited value in screening for ventricular dysfunction.

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