Chronic Neurocognitive, Neuropsychological, and Pulmonary Symptoms in Outpatient and Inpatient Cohorts After COVID-19 Infection

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Abstract

Neuropsychological symptoms associated with post-COVID-19 conditions may prevent patients from resuming normal activities at home or work. We report a retrospective, cross-sectional evaluation of neuropsychological and cardiopulmonary outcomes in 2 groups of patients: outpatients with mild enough infection to be spared from hospitalization and those who required inpatient admission. We hypothesized a dose-response model of post-COVID symptom severity in which persistent consequences would be more severe in those who experienced worse acute infections. In a dedicated COVID clinic, 321 patients were seen (33% outpatient, 67% inpatient). Outpatients skewed female, White, non-Hispanic, and younger. Outpatients had worse insomnia (measured with insomnia severity index) and were less able to resume their usual activities (EQ-5D-5L usual activities scale), despite inpatients experiencing worse cognition (Montreal Cognitive Assessment), having greater obesity (body mass index), decreased exercise tolerance (6-minute-walk distance), and more exertional oxygen desaturation. In both groups, insomnia worsened while cognition improved significantly with time from infection to testing while controlling for patient age; other variables did not. In logistic regression, female sex, higher MoCA score, EQ-5D-5L “usual activities” subscore, less oxygen desaturation with exertion, and longer time from infection remained as significant associations with outpatient status. Our study demonstrated that the functional sequelae of post-COVID-19 conditions in patients with mild acute disease have the potential to be as severe as that in patients who have recovered from severe illness.

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APA

Oliver, S. F., Lazoff, S. A., Popovich, J., Enfield, K. B., Quigg, M., Davis, E. M., & Kadl, A. (2023). Chronic Neurocognitive, Neuropsychological, and Pulmonary Symptoms in Outpatient and Inpatient Cohorts After COVID-19 Infection. Neuroscience Insights, 18. https://doi.org/10.1177/26331055231186998

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