2023
DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2023.1212678
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Spontaneous physical functional recovery after hospitalization for COVID-19: insights from a 1 month follow-up and a model to predict poor trajectory

Abstract: BackgroundLong COVID syndrome has emerged as a new global healthcare challenge, with impaired physical performance being a prominent debilitating factor. Cardiopulmonary rehabilitation is a mainstay of management of symptomatic post-COVID patients, and optimization of candidate selection might allow for more effective use of available resources.MethodsIn order to study the natural dynamics and to identify predictors of physical functional recovery following hospitalization for COVID-19, 6 min walk test was per… Show more

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“…Compared to the set of predictors of poor physical functional recovery at 1 month post-discharge in the same cohort of patients (30), age, ESR, eGFR, need for in-hospital oxygen supplementation, and pre-discharge 6MWD have retained their prognostic value for predicting the outcome at 3 months, whereas the extent of radiological pulmonary involvement, pre-discharge SpO2, and history of hypertension became insignificant. At the same time, we revealed a subset of additional predictors of PCS that were either irrelevant (sex, height, BMI, SBP) or had not been analyzed at 1 month (RV free wall strain, LV end-diastolic index, and Charlson's comorbidity index).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Compared to the set of predictors of poor physical functional recovery at 1 month post-discharge in the same cohort of patients (30), age, ESR, eGFR, need for in-hospital oxygen supplementation, and pre-discharge 6MWD have retained their prognostic value for predicting the outcome at 3 months, whereas the extent of radiological pulmonary involvement, pre-discharge SpO2, and history of hypertension became insignificant. At the same time, we revealed a subset of additional predictors of PCS that were either irrelevant (sex, height, BMI, SBP) or had not been analyzed at 1 month (RV free wall strain, LV end-diastolic index, and Charlson's comorbidity index).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%