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Ongoing Exercise Intolerance Following COVID-19: A Magnetic Resonance-Augmented Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Study.
Brown, James T; Saigal, Anita; Karia, Nina; Patel, Rishi K; Razvi, Yousuf; Constantinou, Natalie; Steeden, Jennifer A; Mandal, Swapna; Kotecha, Tushar; Fontana, Marianna; Goldring, James; Muthurangu, Vivek; Knight, Daniel S.
  • Brown JT; National Pulmonary Hypertension Service Royal Free London NHS Foundation TrustLondon United Kingdom.
  • Saigal A; UCL Department of Cardiac MRI University College London (Royal Free Campus) London United Kingdom.
  • Karia N; Institute of Cardiovascular ScienceUniversity College London United Kingdom.
  • Patel RK; Department of Respiratory Medicine Royal Free London NHS Foundation TrustLondon United Kingdom.
  • Razvi Y; National Pulmonary Hypertension Service Royal Free London NHS Foundation TrustLondon United Kingdom.
  • Constantinou N; UCL Department of Cardiac MRI University College London (Royal Free Campus) London United Kingdom.
  • Steeden JA; Institute of Cardiovascular ScienceUniversity College London United Kingdom.
  • Mandal S; UCL Department of Cardiac MRI University College London (Royal Free Campus) London United Kingdom.
  • Kotecha T; National Amyloidosis Centre Division of Medicine University College London United Kingdom.
  • Fontana M; UCL Department of Cardiac MRI University College London (Royal Free Campus) London United Kingdom.
  • Goldring J; National Amyloidosis Centre Division of Medicine University College London United Kingdom.
  • Muthurangu V; UCL Department of Cardiac MRI University College London (Royal Free Campus) London United Kingdom.
  • Knight DS; Institute of Cardiovascular ScienceUniversity College London United Kingdom.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 11(9): e024207, 2022 05 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1807754
ABSTRACT
Background Ongoing exercise intolerance of unclear cause following COVID-19 infection is well recognized but poorly understood. We investigated exercise capacity in patients previously hospitalized with COVID-19 with and without self-reported exercise intolerance using magnetic resonance-augmented cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Methods and Results Sixty subjects were enrolled in this single-center prospective observational case-control study, split into 3 equally sized groups 2 groups of age-, sex-, and comorbidity-matched previously hospitalized patients following COVID-19 without clearly identifiable postviral complications and with either self-reported reduced (COVIDreduced) or fully recovered (COVIDnormal) exercise capacity; a group of age- and sex-matched healthy controls. The COVIDreducedgroup had the lowest peak workload (79W [Interquartile range (IQR), 65-100] versus controls 104W [IQR, 86-148]; P=0.01) and shortest exercise duration (13.3±2.8 minutes versus controls 16.6±3.5 minutes; P=0.008), with no differences in these parameters between COVIDnormal patients and controls. The COVIDreduced group had (1) the lowest peak indexed oxygen uptake (14.9 mL/minper kg [IQR, 13.1-16.2]) versus controls (22.3 mL/min per kg [IQR, 16.9-27.6]; P=0.003) and COVIDnormal patients (19.1 mL/min per kg [IQR, 15.4-23.7]; P=0.04); (2) the lowest peak indexed cardiac output (4.7±1.2 L/min per m2) versus controls (6.0±1.2 L/min per m2; P=0.004) and COVIDnormal patients (5.7±1.5 L/min per m2; P=0.02), associated with lower indexed stroke volume (SViCOVIDreduced 39±10 mL/min per m2 versus COVIDnormal 43±7 mL/min per m2 versus controls 48±10 mL/min per m2; P=0.02). There were no differences in peak tissue oxygen extraction or biventricular ejection fractions between groups. There were no associations between COVID-19 illness severity and peak magnetic resonance-augmented cardiopulmonary exercise testing metrics. Peak indexed oxygen uptake, indexed cardiac output, and indexed stroke volume all correlated with duration from discharge to magnetic resonance-augmented cardiopulmonary exercise testing (P<0.05). Conclusions Magnetic resonance-augmented cardiopulmonary exercise testing suggests failure to augment stroke volume as a potential mechanism of exercise intolerance in previously hospitalized patients with COVID-19. This is unrelated to disease severity and, reassuringly, improves with time from acute illness.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: COVID-19 / Heart Failure Type of study: Experimental Studies / Observational study / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Humans Language: English Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2022 Document Type: Article

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: COVID-19 / Heart Failure Type of study: Experimental Studies / Observational study / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Humans Language: English Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2022 Document Type: Article