InitialConditions
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Yep, it's definitely now being used to describe an acute reaction to exercise (the type you'd expect with cardiovascular impairment).
How 'nice'.The term post exertional malaise is being used a lot in the media. Recently, I've read several times that 'PEM is a medical term used to describe pwCOVID'.
It varies between people but generally what I've seen in LC forums is the same thing we mean. It definitely does not mean post-exercise fatigue the way the BPS fanatics use, that I can confirm. It's the increase of symptoms and general malaise. Not always with crushing exhaustion but generally speaking it means the same thing we do, accounting for how varied the symptoms themselves are between people.yes, I think PEM is being used to mean exhausted after exercise which is not the way it is used in ME. The tide is against us so maybe it is time to try to establish a term for what happens to us. PENE may not be a good description but at least everyone would not read it as something it is not.
We already have enough problems with people reading about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and thinking they are chronically fatigued too but still have to get up to go to work every morning.
I suspect these sorts of findings will be found in many long-Covid patients, who similarly might report 'post-exertional malaise'. My feeling is this presentation has little to do with ME/CFS, and that the 'post-exertional malaise' is not ME/CFS PEM. I also think this patient is likely to make a good recovery with treatment.
The article continues with the researcher calling it a mystery with many unresolved issues. A completely new disease, like a medical UFO.So basically they got nuffin...no clue, no fresh ideas.
Well, at least it's something that their hypotheses happen to be the exact same hypotheses that have been around ME research for the last several decades. I don't what that something is but it's something. They're also pretty self-evident, to be honest. Which may be the most important something: how the hell did medicine sleep on the self-evident for so long?So basically they got nuffin...no clue, no fresh ideas.
‘Long COVID’: persistent COVID-19 symptoms in survivors managed in Lagos State, Nigeria
BMC Infectious Diseases volume 21, Article number: 304 (2021) Cite this article
- Bodunrin Osikomaiya,
- Olufemi Erinoso,
- Kikelomo Ololade Wright,
- Aina Olufemi Odusola,
- Babafemi Thomas,
- Oluwatosin Adeyemi,
- Abimbola Bowale,
- Olusola Adejumo,
- Ayodeji Falana,
- Ismail Abdus-salam,
- Olusegun Ogboye,
- Akin Osibogun &
- Akin Abayomi
Abstract
Background
Coronavirus disease once thought to be a respiratory infection is now recognised as a multi-system disease affecting the respiratory, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, neurological, immune, and hematopoietic systems. An emerging body of evidence suggests the persistence of COVID-19 symptoms of varying patterns among some survivors. This study aimed to describe persistent symptoms in COVID-19 survivors and investigate possible risk factors for these persistent symptoms.
Methods
The study used a retrospective study design. The study population comprised of discharged COVID-19 patients. Demographic information, days since discharge, comorbidities, and persistent COVID-19 like symptoms were assessed in patients attending the COVID-19 outpatient clinic in Lagos State. Statistical analysis was done using STATA 15.0 software (StataCorp Texas) with significance placed at p-value < 0.05.
Results
A total of 274 patients were enrolled in the study. A majority were within the age group > 35 to ≤49 years (38.3%), and male (66.1%). More than one-third (40.9%) had persistent COVID-19 symptoms after discharge, and 19.7% had more than three persistent COVID-like symptoms. The most persistent COVID-like symptoms experienced were easy fatigability (12.8%), headaches (12.8%), and chest pain (9.8%). Symptomatic COVID-19 disease with moderate severity compared to mild severity was a predictor of persistent COVID-like symptoms after discharge (p < 0.05).
Conclusion
Findings from this study suggests that patients who recovered from COVID-19 disease may still experience COVID-19 like symptoms, particularly fatigue and headaches. Therefore, careful monitoring should be in place after discharge to help mitigate the effects of these symptoms and improve the quality of life of COVID-19 survivors.
Prevalence of Symptoms in Patients Discharged from COVID Care Facility of NIMS Hospital: Is RT PCR Negativity Truly Reflecting Recovery? A Single-Centre Observational Study
Authors Tomar BS, Singh M, Nathiya D, Sharma A, Sharma E, Bareth H, Suman S, Ruparelia DP, Patel JB, Gajera VK
Received 19 December 2020
Accepted for publication 3 March 2021
Published 25 March 2021 Volume 2021:14 Pages 1069—1078
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IJGM.S295499
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 3
Editor who approved publication: Dr Scott Fraser
Balvir S Tomar,1 Mahaveer Singh,2 Deepak Nathiya,3 Abhishek Sharma,4 Eshan Sharma,4 Hemant Bareth,3 Supriya Suman,3 Darshan Purshotambhai Ruparelia,4 Jaykumar Bharatbhai Patel,4 Vikrant Kantilal Gajera4 On Behalf of the NIMS COVID 19 Investigator Group
1Institute of Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Transplant, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, India; 2Department of Endocrinology, National Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Hospital, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, 303121, India; 3Department of Pharmacy Practice, Institute of Pharmacy, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, India; 4Department of General Medicine, National Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Hospital, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, India
Correspondence: Mahaveer Singh
Department of Endocrinology, National Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Hospital, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, 303121, India
Tel +91 8949836075
Email drms.mamcmed@gmail.com
Deepak Nathiya
Department of Pharmacy Practice, Institute of Pharmacy, Nims University Rajasthan, Jaipur, 303121, India
Tel +91 9929600137
Email dnathiya@nimsuniversity.org
Purpose: To assess the prevalence of post-COVID symptoms in patients with recovered COVID-19 (nasopharyngeal RT PCR negative) who were discharged from an acute COVID care facility at a tertiary care teaching hospital in North India.
Methods: This study was an observational study with retrospective data collection, conducted in the COVID follow-up clinic, a combined clinic of medicine and endocrinology. Patients discharged from the acute COVID care facility were recruited after 14 days of discharge if they fulfilled inclusion and exclusion criteria. The retrospective data was collected from the hospital records/EMR and analysed by the SPSSv23.
Results: Fifty patients, who fulfilled the inclusion and exclusion criteria, were included in the study. The Mean age of patients was 53.4± 13.8 years (range 28– 77). Seventy six percent were male, and 38% had type 2 diabetes. Fever (94%), cough (78%) and breathlessness (68%), were the most common symptoms at presentation to acute care facility. Oxygen saturation at presentation had a negative correlation with D-Dimer, age, and C reactive protein. When patients were evaluated clinically, after 14 days (range 15 to 50 days) of the discharge, 82% of patients had at least one persistent symptom. Fatigue (74%) was the most common symptoms in follow-up followed by breathlessness (44%), and muscle weakness (36%). Two patients had persistent fever, even after negative RT PCR status.
Conclusion: Patients discharged from the acute COVID care facility had a high prevalence of post-COVID symptoms even after 14 days.
Keywords: COVID-19, diabetes, SARS-CoV-2, oxygen saturation, post-COVID
5-minute BBC video where a young man & his partner describe his life following developing ME/CFS following Covid (i.e. a form of #LongCovid)
https://twitter.com/TomKindlon/status/1376921317673426947?s=20
The ME/CFS community tends to be too quick to assume that someone didn't have ME/CFS because some other medical problem was found.
We hear from two mothers whose teenage children have suffered from persistent symptoms, months after testing positive for Covid-19. We’ll also get a specialist in paediatric infectious diseases to explain what is known about children and coronavirus.
Sick for the long haul: One third of COVID-19 patients have symptoms for eight months
One in three Australian COVID-19 patients is still battling symptoms eight months after being infected, and youth is no protection against the debilitating effects of ‘Long COVID’.
...
Of the patients who met the criteria for ‘Long COVID’, almost half (46 per cent) said they had not fully recovered, the researchers reported in their paper published on Wednesday to the pre-print server medRxiv which is not yet peer-reviewed.
...
Patients didn’t show any significant signs of improvements between their four-month and eight-month assessments.
“These symptoms are probably a mixture of a whole range of things that happened to these people after [being infected with] the virus. Some people may have been traumatised by their COVID diagnoses and had predominantly mental health symptoms, some patients were really sick and needed ventilation and have lung injuries, middle-aged women may have an immune response,” he said.