Selected article for: "clinical severity and disease severity"

Author: Xudan Chen; Yang Zhang; Baoyi Zhu; Jianwen Zeng; Wenxin Hong; Xi He; Jingfeng Chen; Haipeng Zheng; Shuang Qiu; Ying Deng; Juliana Chan; Jian Wang
Title: Associations of clinical characteristics and antiviral drugs with viral RNA clearance in patients with COVID-19 in Guangzhou, China: a retrospective cohort study
  • Document date: 2020_4_14
  • ID: 9j4ese89_18
    Snippet: The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is the . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.09.20058941 doi: medRxiv preprint findings were described in Table 1 . Over half of patients (57.9%) had elevated D-dimer levels, and 38.3% had elevated procalcitonin levels. According to the severity of clinical manifestation and chest imaging, 22 (7.7%), 199 (70.1%), 40 (14.1%), and 6 (2.1%) patients were categorized into mild, moderate.....
    Document: The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is the . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.09.20058941 doi: medRxiv preprint findings were described in Table 1 . Over half of patients (57.9%) had elevated D-dimer levels, and 38.3% had elevated procalcitonin levels. According to the severity of clinical manifestation and chest imaging, 22 (7.7%), 199 (70.1%), 40 (14.1%), and 6 (2.1%) patients were categorized into mild, moderate, serious, and critical illness, respectively, and 17 patients (6.0%) were asymptomatic throughout the whole clinical course although 11 of them had a pneumonia CT image on admission. No significant differences were observed in disease severity by sex and smoking status. Elderly patients and those with comorbidity were more likely to have serious and critical illness ( Table 2 ).

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