Author: Jirak, Peter; Larbig, Robert; Shomanova, Zornitsa; Fröb, Elisabeth J.; Dankl, Daniel; Torgersen, Christian; Frank, Nino; Mahringer, Magdalena; Butkiene, Dominyka; Haake, Hendrik; Salzer, Helmut J.F.; Tschoellitsch, Thomas; Lichtenauer, Michael; Egle, Alexander; Lamprecht, Bernd; Reinecke, Holger; Hoppe, Uta C.; Pistulli, Rudin; Motloch, Lukas J.
Title: Myocardial injury in severe COVIDâ€19 is similar to pneumonias of other origin: results from a multicentre study Cord-id: 198or19l Document date: 2020_12_17
ID: 198or19l
Snippet: AIMS: COVIDâ€19, a respiratory viral disease causing severe pneumonia, also affects the heart and other organs. Whether its cardiac involvement is a specific feature consisting of myocarditis, or simply due to microvascular injury and systemic inflammation, is yet unclear and presently debated. Because myocardial injury is also common in other kinds of pneumonias, we investigated and compared such occurrence in severe pneumonias due to COVIDâ€19 and other causes. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analys
Document: AIMS: COVIDâ€19, a respiratory viral disease causing severe pneumonia, also affects the heart and other organs. Whether its cardiac involvement is a specific feature consisting of myocarditis, or simply due to microvascular injury and systemic inflammation, is yet unclear and presently debated. Because myocardial injury is also common in other kinds of pneumonias, we investigated and compared such occurrence in severe pneumonias due to COVIDâ€19 and other causes. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analysed data from 156 critically ill patients requiring mechanical ventilation in four European tertiary hospitals, including all n = 76 COVIDâ€19 patients with severe disease course requiring at least ventilatory support, matched to n = 76 from a retrospective consecutive patient cohort of severe pneumonias of other origin (matched for age, gender, and type of ventilator therapy). When compared to the nonâ€COVIDâ€19, mortality (COVIDâ€19 = 38.2% vs. nonâ€COVIDâ€19 = 51.3%, P = 0.142) and impairment of systolic function were not significantly different. Surprisingly, myocardial injury was even more frequent in nonâ€COVIDâ€19 (96.4% vs. 78.1% P = 0.004). Although inflammatory activity [Câ€reactive protein (CRP) and interleukinâ€6] was indifferent, dâ€dimer and thromboembolic incidence (COVIDâ€19 = 23.7% vs. nonâ€COVIDâ€19 = 5.3%, P = 0.002) driven by pulmonary embolism rates (COVIDâ€19 = 17.1% vs. nonâ€COVIDâ€19 = 2.6%, P = 0.005) were higher. CONCLUSIONS: Myocardial injury was frequent in severe COVIDâ€19 requiring mechanical ventilation, but still less frequent than in similarly severe pneumonias of other origin, indicating that cardiac involvement may not be a specific feature of COVIDâ€19. While mortality was also similar, COVIDâ€19 is characterized with increased thrombogenicity and high pulmonary embolism rates.
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