Author: Ragni, Enrico; Mangiavini, Laura; Viganò, Marco; Brini, Anna Teresa; Peretti, Giuseppe Michele; Banfi, Giuseppe; de Girolamo, Laura
Title: Management of osteoarthritis during COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: uxfk6k3c Document date: 2020_5_21
ID: uxfk6k3c
Snippet: The pandemic spread of the new COVIDâ€19 coronavirus infection in China first, and all over the world at present, has become a global health emergency due to the rapidly increasing number of affected patients. Currently, a clear relationship between COVIDâ€19 infection incidence and/or complications due to chronic or occasional treatments for other pathologies is still not clear, albeit COVIDâ€19 pandemic may condition the treatment strategy of complex disorders, as osteoarthritis (OA). Impor
Document: The pandemic spread of the new COVIDâ€19 coronavirus infection in China first, and all over the world at present, has become a global health emergency due to the rapidly increasing number of affected patients. Currently, a clear relationship between COVIDâ€19 infection incidence and/or complications due to chronic or occasional treatments for other pathologies is still not clear, albeit COVIDâ€19 pandemic may condition the treatment strategy of complex disorders, as osteoarthritis (OA). Importantly, OA is the most common ageâ€related joint disease affecting more than 80% of people older than the age of 55, an age burden also shared with the highest severity in COVIDâ€19 patients. OA patients often show a large array of concomitant pathologies such as diabetes, inflammation and cardiovascular diseases that are again shared with COVIDâ€19 patients and may therefore increase complications. Moreover, different OA treatments such as NSAIDs, paracetamol, corticosteroids, opioids or other molecules have a wide array of iatrogenic effects, potentially increasing COVIDâ€19 secondary infection incidence or complications. In this review we critically analyse the evidences on either negative or positive effect of drugs commonly used to manage OA in this particular scenario. This would provide orthopaedic surgeons at first, and physicians, pharmacologists and clinicians at general, a comprehensive description about the safety of the current pharmacological approaches and a decision making tool to treat their OA patients as the coronavirus pandemic continues.
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