Author: Du, Li; Cao, Xiaoling; Chen, Jing; Wei, Xiuqi; Zeng, Yi; Cheng, Chen; Lin, Yuqi; Tan, Wenbin; Wang, Hui
Title: Fecal occult blood and urinary cytology tests for rapid screening of inflammatory infection in the gastrointestinal and urological systems in patients with Coronavirus disease 2019 Cord-id: eslf89dj Document date: 2020_10_15
ID: eslf89dj
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal infections (GI) and urological infections (UI) have not been fully addressed in COVIDâ€19 patients. We aimed to evaluate the values of routine fecal occult blood (FOB) test and urinary cytology test (UCT) for screening of GI and UI in COVIDâ€19 patients. METHODS: In this retrospective study, COVIDâ€19 patients without associated comorbidities were divided into FOB†or UCTâ€positive or FOB†or UCTâ€negative groups. Their clinical characteristics and laborator
Document: BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal infections (GI) and urological infections (UI) have not been fully addressed in COVIDâ€19 patients. We aimed to evaluate the values of routine fecal occult blood (FOB) test and urinary cytology test (UCT) for screening of GI and UI in COVIDâ€19 patients. METHODS: In this retrospective study, COVIDâ€19 patients without associated comorbidities were divided into FOB†or UCTâ€positive or FOB†or UCTâ€negative groups. Their clinical characteristics and laboratory findings were then compared. RESULTS: A total of 13.6% of patients (47 of 345) tested positive for FOB, and 57.4% (27 of 47) of these patients lacked gastrointestinal symptoms. A total of 30.1% of patients (104 of 345) exhibited gastrointestinal symptoms, and 38.0% (131 of 345) were positive for either FOB or gastrointestinal symptoms. FOBâ€positive patients possessed significantly higher levels of Câ€reactive protein and fewer lymphocytes than FOBâ€negative patients. A total of 36.9% of patients (80 of 217) exhibited positive UCT, and 97.5% (78 of 80) of these patients possessed normal levels of serum markers for renal injuries. Significant differences in age and sex ratios were observed between the UCTâ€positive and UCTâ€negative groups, and 72.4% (42 of 58) of female patients over 60 years old were UCTâ€positive. CONCLUSIONS: Fecal occult blood test in combination with gastrointestinal symptoms could serve as a simple and useful screening approach for GI diagnoses for COVIDâ€19. Age and sex are risk factors for UI in COVIDâ€19 patients. UCT could be a sensitive tool for assessing early UI at a stage in which serum markers for renal injuries appear normal.
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