Author: Chen, Liwen; Deng, Chaohua; Chen, Xuhui; Zhang, Xian; Chen, Bo; Yu, Huimin; Qin, Yuanjun; Xiao, Ke; Zhang, Hong; Sun, Xufang
Title: Ocular manifestations and clinical characteristics of 535 cases of COVIDâ€19 in Wuhan, China: a crossâ€sectional study Cord-id: bfp6tsuc Document date: 2020_5_18
ID: bfp6tsuc
Snippet: PURPOSE: To investigate the ocular manifestations and clinical characteristics of COVIDâ€19 patients caused by SARSâ€CoVâ€2 in Wuhan, China. METHODS: A total of 535 COVIDâ€19 patients were recruited at Mobile Cabin Hospital and Tongji Hospital. Information on demographic characteristics, exposure history, ocular symptoms, eye drop medication, eye protections, chronic eye diseases, systemic concomitant symptoms, radiologic findings and SARSâ€CoVâ€2 detection in nasopharyngeal swabs by realâ
Document: PURPOSE: To investigate the ocular manifestations and clinical characteristics of COVIDâ€19 patients caused by SARSâ€CoVâ€2 in Wuhan, China. METHODS: A total of 535 COVIDâ€19 patients were recruited at Mobile Cabin Hospital and Tongji Hospital. Information on demographic characteristics, exposure history, ocular symptoms, eye drop medication, eye protections, chronic eye diseases, systemic concomitant symptoms, radiologic findings and SARSâ€CoVâ€2 detection in nasopharyngeal swabs by realâ€time PCR was collected from questionnaires and electronic medical records. RESULTS: Of 535 patients, 27 patients (5.0%) presented with conjunctival congestion and 4 patients had conjunctival congestion as the initial symptom. The average duration of conjunctival congestion was 5.9 ± 4.5 days (mean [SD]). The other ocular symptoms, including increased conjunctival secretion, ocular pain, photophobia, dry eye and tearing, were also found in patients with conjunctival congestion. Notably, hand–eye contact was independently correlated with conjunctival congestion in COVIDâ€19 patients. We also found that some COVIDâ€19 patients had chronic eye diseases, including conjunctivitis (33, 6.2%), xerophthalmia (24, 4.5%) and keratitis (14, 2.6%). Similar to the published studies, the most common clinical symptoms were fever, cough and fatigue. A total of 343 patients (64.1%) had positive SARSâ€CoVâ€2 detection in nasopharyngeal swabs. CONCLUSIONS: Conjunctival congestion is one of the COVIDâ€19â€related ocular symptoms, which could occur as the initial symptoms. Frequent hand–eye contact may be the risk factor for conjunctival congestion in COVIDâ€19 patients. Screening of patients with conjunctival congestion by ophthalmologists is advocated during the outbreak of COVIDâ€19. It is essential to provide eyeâ€care equipment and strengthen education on eye protection.
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