Selected article for: "arterial pressure and heart rate"

Author: Mingzhu Yin; Lijuan Zhang; Guangtong Deng; Chaofei Han; Minxue Shen; Hongyin Sun; Furong Zeng; Wei Zhang; Lan Chen; Qingqing Luo; Dujuan Yao; Min Wu; Shihuan Yu; Hui Chen; David Baud; Xiang Chen
Title: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Infection During Pregnancy In China: A Retrospective Cohort Study
  • Document date: 2020_4_11
  • ID: 6wolrfvk_24
    Snippet: The clinical symptoms of the two groups were compared in Table 1 . Fever was the most common symptom in both groups, but pregnant patients had a significantly lower proportion of fever than non-pregnant patients (54·8% vs. 87·5%, p=0·006). Moreover, pregnant patients had a shorter average interval from onset to hospitalization than non-pregnant patients (7·80 ±7·0d vs. 13·2 ± 8·2d, p=0·005), while a higher proportion of pregnant patient.....
    Document: The clinical symptoms of the two groups were compared in Table 1 . Fever was the most common symptom in both groups, but pregnant patients had a significantly lower proportion of fever than non-pregnant patients (54·8% vs. 87·5%, p=0·006). Moreover, pregnant patients had a shorter average interval from onset to hospitalization than non-pregnant patients (7·80 ±7·0d vs. 13·2 ± 8·2d, p=0·005), while a higher proportion of pregnant patients was diagnosed as severe or critical COVID-19 than non-pregnant patients (32·3% vs. 11·4%, p=0·039). At present, 52 (78·8%) patients were discharged out of hospital, including 22 (71%) pregnant patients and 30 (85.7%) non-pregnant patients. Mean hospital stay, heart rate, and respiratory rate were not statistically different between these two groups. Mean arterial pressure was lower in pregnant patients than non-pregnant patients (87·2 ± 10·4 vs. 96·7 ± 7·6 mmHg, p< 0·001).

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