ABSTRACT
We present an interesting case of a patient who was discharged from the hospital on daptomycin and ertapenem in the setting of osteomyelitis. The patient did not have any respiratory symptoms during that hospital stay. A few weeks after discharge, the patient came back to the hospital with complaints of fever and shortness of breath. Chest X-ray showed pulmonary infiltrates. Initially, the patient was treated for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) vs pneumonia, but she did not improve. When labs showed significant eosinophilia, daptomycin-induced eosinophilic pneumonia became the working diagnosis, and the patient improved significantly when daptomycin was discontinued and steroids were started.
ABSTRACT
The study was aimed to mention the epidemiology of smoking in Pakistani COVID-19 infected patients along with the disease severity, oxygen dependency and fatality rate. A cross sectional epidemiological study was carried out on 555 confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection. The median age was 47±16 years. 59% were male and 41% were female. Most of the patients (97.5%) survived, while only 2.5% expired. 25.6% patients required the oxygen. Total 17 (3%) COVID-19 patients with age 20-75 years were identified as smokers. No mortality was observed in smokers. The 1.4% smokers presented with mild disease, 1.2% with moderate disease and 0.4% had severe disease. According to Chi-Square test, there existed an insignificant difference (p-value: 0.38649) between smokers and non-smokers in disease severity levels. Smoking is a precursor for countless diseases, but it behaved differently in COVID-19 infected patients, as its prevalence was significantly low. We found no significant variation of the disease severity among the smokers and non-smokers. Profound experiments should be conducted to recommend whether nicotine can be used as a protective agent to negate COVID-19 infection.