September 3, 2020 - a podcast by COVID19LST

from 2020-09-08T01:25:06

:: ::

On today's episode we discuss:


—Epidemiology: Systematic review and meta-analysis of 42 studies including 23,353 COVID-19 positive patients estimated random prevalence of olfactory dysfunction to be 38.5%, taste dysfunction 30.4%, and overall chemosensory dysfunction 50.2% among these patients with Caucasians having a 3-6 times higher prevalence of chemosensory deficits (43.2%) than East Asians (15.1%). These results suggest that chemosensory dysfunction is a relatively common effect of COVID, though inter-study variability was high for this analysis.


· A retrospective observational study conducted in Wuhan, China found that among 126 patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection, 3 patients had a re-detected COVID-19 positive result via RT-PCR when tested 11-20 days after being discharged, but remained asymptomatic following discharge. This study suggests that while the reactivation rate is low, the window for COVID-19 viral shedding and virus reactivation may be longer than previously indicated and should be studied more thoroughly in order to guide public health measures.


· A cross-sectional study at Wuhan's Children Hospital of 216 COVID-19-positive pediatric patients (ages 2-12) found that 22.7% of these patients had ocular findings. The most common ocular manifestations included conjunctival discharge (55.1%), eye rubbing (38.8%), and conjunctival congestion (10.2%). Additionally, 9 children had ocular manifestations as their initial presenting symptom, although fever and cough remained the most common COVID-19 manifestations.


—Understanding the Pathology: A group of international interdisciplinary researchers performed real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) on 461 viral samples of 12 severely ill and 11 mildly ill COVID-19


—Management: Researchers performed a retrospective clinical analysis on 50 critical and 73 non-critical COVID-19-positive and found that lower lymphocyte count, high neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio, high platelet to lymphocyte ratio, elevated IL‐6 and C-reactive peptide, increased chest CT score, need for nutritional support and electrolyte imbalance may be used as prognostic markers of critical COVID-19 positive patients.


—Mental Health & Resilience Needs: Psychologists, pharmacists, and toxicologists in Canada surveyed a group of 320 participants to assess home, work and psychological factors and how they relate to alcohol use to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic. They found that having a child under 18-years-old was associated, higher levels of depression and lower levels of social connectedness showed increased coping tendencies to drink, and loss of income had a positive association with prior 30-day alcohol use, though no association was found between COVID-19 anxiety and drinking to cope.



---

Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/covid19lst/support

Further episodes of The COVID-19 LST Report

Further podcasts by COVID19LST

Website of COVID19LST