Selected article for: "severe type and sex difference"

Author: Jing Li; Yinghua Zhang; Fang Wang; Bing Liu; Hui Li; Guodong Tang; Zhigang Chang; Aihua Liu; Chunyi Fu; Jing Gao; Jing Li
Title: Sex differences in clinical findings among patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and severe condition
  • Document date: 2020_2_29
  • ID: 2zm4dq0u_33
    Snippet: shifting from severe to critical type. On the other side, only one man (20.0%) in five patients discharged from hospital. The similar phenomenon has also been reported in prior SARS-CoV infection in 2003. Karlberg et al. [12] analyzed 1755 SARS cases and found that men had a significantly higher mortality than women did (21.9% versus 13.2%, p < 0.0001). Leung et al. [14] showed that male sex was independently associated with a greater risk for ad.....
    Document: shifting from severe to critical type. On the other side, only one man (20.0%) in five patients discharged from hospital. The similar phenomenon has also been reported in prior SARS-CoV infection in 2003. Karlberg et al. [12] analyzed 1755 SARS cases and found that men had a significantly higher mortality than women did (21.9% versus 13.2%, p < 0.0001). Leung et al. [14] showed that male sex was independently associated with a greater risk for adverse events in SARS patients. Interestingly, there is no clear evidence showing the sex difference in prognosis of influenza [15] [16] [17] . It seems that the different prognosis between men and women might be a feature for coronavirus infections.

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