Importance of Blood Glucose Measurement for Predicting the Prognosis of Long COVID: A Retrospective Study in Japan, 2024, Yokoyama+

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by SNT Gatchaman, Jul 28, 2024.

  1. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Importance of Blood Glucose Measurement for Predicting the Prognosis of Long COVID: A Retrospective Study in Japan
    Yokoyama, Sho; Honda, Hiroyuki; Otsuka, Yuki; Tokumasu, Kazuki; Nakano, Yasuhiro; Sakurada, Yasue; Matsuda, Yui; Sunada, Naruhiko; Hasegawa, Toru; Takase, Ryosuke; Omura, Daisuke; Soejima, Yoshiaki; Ueda, Keigo; Kishida, Masayuki; Otsuka, Fumio

    PURPOSE
    The present study aimed to clarify the effects of a hyperglycemic condition on the clinical consequences of long COVID.

    METHODS
    Among 643 patients who visited the outpatient clinic of our hospital from February 2021 to September 2023, long COVID patients were classified into a hyperglycemic (HG) group with casual blood glucose levels above 140 mg/dL and a normoglycemic (NG) group. The patients’ backgrounds, clinical symptoms, health status including the QOL evaluation scale (EQ-5D-5L), self-rating depression scale (SDS), and F-scale questionnaire (FSSG), blood test data, and recovery periods were analyzed.

    RESULTS
    The NG group included 607 patients with long COVID and the HG group included 36 patients with long COVID. Patients in the HG group were older than those in the NG group (55 vs. 41 years; p < 0.001) and included a larger percentage of males (67% vs. 44%; p = 0.009). The HG group had a larger percentage of patients with moderate-to-severe conditions in the acute infection phase (28% vs. 12%; p = 0.008), a higher BMI (25 vs. 22 kg/m2; p < 0.001), higher blood pressure (138/81 vs. 122/72 mmHg; p < 0.001), and a larger percentage of patients with an alcohol drinking habit (53% vs. 34%; p = 0.031). Long COVID symptoms and self-rated scales were not differed between the two groups; however, the laboratory data showed that liver and renal functions and metabolic data were significantly worse in the HG group. Although there was no apparent difference between the two groups in duration from the infection to the first visit, the HG group had a significantly longer period of recovery from long COVID (median period of 421 vs. 294 days; p = 0.019).

    CONCLUSIONS
    A hyperglycemic state associated with other lifestyle-related diseases is associated with the prolongation of recovery from long COVID.

    Link | PDF (Journal of Clinical Medicine) [Open Access]
     
    Peter Trewhitt and Deanne NZ like this.
  2. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Sounds like too many confounders to implicate hyperglycaemia as an isolated risk factor (as the abstract concludes).
     

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