Abstract
Breathlessness, also known as dyspnoea, is a debilitating and frequent symptom. Several reports have highlighted the lack of dyspnoea in a subgroup of patients suffering from COVID-19, sometimes referred to as "silent"or "happy hyp-oxaemia."Reports have also mentioned the absence of a clear relationship between the clinical severity of the disease and levels of breathlessness reported by patients. The cerebral complications of COVID-19 have been largely demonstrated with a high prevalence of an acute encephalopathy that could possibly affect the processing of afferent signals or top-down modulation of breathlessness signals. In this review, we aim to highlight the mechanisms involved in breathlessness and summarize the pathophysiology of COVID-19 and its known effects on the brain-lung interaction. We then offer hypotheses for the alteration of breathlessness perception in COVID-19 patients and suggest ways of further researching this phenomenon.
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Hentsch, L., Cocetta, S., Allali, G., Santana, I., Eason, R., Adam, E., & Janssens, J. P. (2021, October 1). Breathlessness and COVID-19: A call for research. Respiration. S. Karger AG. https://doi.org/10.1159/000517400
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