Patterns of Long COVID Symptoms: A Multi-Center Cross Sectional Study, 2022, Yelin et al

Andy

Retired committee member
Abstract

Background: Long COVID has become a burden on healthcare systems worldwide. Research into the etiology and risk factors has been impeded by observing all diverse manifestations as part of a single entity. We aimed to determine patterns of symptoms in convalescing COVID-19 patients.

Methods: Symptomatic patients were recruited from four countries. Data were collected regarding demographics, comorbidities, acute disease and persistent symptoms. Factor analysis was performed to elucidate symptom patterns. Associations of the patterns with patients’ characteristics, features of acute disease and effect on daily life were sought.

Results: We included 1027 symptomatic post-COVID individuals in the analysis. The majority of participants were graded as having a non-severe acute COVID-19 (N = 763, 74.3%). We identified six patterns of symptoms: cognitive, pain-syndrome, pulmonary, cardiac, anosmia-dysgeusia and headache. The cognitive pattern was the major symptoms pattern, explaining 26.2% of the variance; the other patterns each explained 6.5–9.5% of the variance. The cognitive pattern was higher in patients who were outpatients during the acute disease. The pain-syndrome pattern was associated with acute disease severity, higher in women and increased with age. The pulmonary pattern was associated with prior lung disease and severe acute disease. Only two of the patterns (cognitive and cardiac) were associated with failure to return to pre-COVID occupational and physical activity status.

Conclusion: Long COVID diverse symptoms can be grouped into six unique patterns. Using these patterns in future research may improve our understanding of pathophysiology and risk factors of persistent COVID, provide homogenous terminology for clinical research, and direct therapeutic interventions.

Open access, https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/11/4/898/htm
 
NO fatigue...:bored:
They just don't talk about it in the abstract, lots of mentions of it in the paper including this,

Persistent fatigue, the main symptom described in all long COVID studies, was found to distribute equally in two main patterns (the cognitive and the pain syndrome patterns) and to trend highly in a third (the cardiac pattern). This finding is reminiscent of the two main examples of lasting fatigue: chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia [15,18], sometimes attributed to viral illnesses such as Epstein-Barr virus, SARS and Chikungunya, among others [19]. Fatigue is the only symptom exhibiting this type of distribution among the patterns. This distribution may imply that there are multiple etiologies of fatigue (physical, mental, emotional) and that, therefore, fatigue should be researched according to the accompanying symptoms or more specific features.
 
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