1.Clinical features of severe or critical ill patients with COVID-19.
Weidang XIE ; Shijie ZHU ; Yanan LIU ; Yujia BAI ; Weijun FU ; Hui CHEN ; Zhongqing CHEN ; Jianwu ZHANG
Journal of Southern Medical University 2020;40(8):1112-1118
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze the clinical features of severe or critical ill adult patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19).
METHODS:
The clinical data of 75 patients with severe or critical COVID-19 in Honghu People's Hospital from January to March in 2020 were collected.
RESULTS:
Of the 75 patients with COVID-19 pneumonia, 41 were male (54.67%) and 34 were female (45.33%) with a mean age of 67.53 ±12.37 years; 43 patients had severe and 32 had critical COVID-19, and 49.3% of the patients had underlying diseases. The main clinical manifestations included fever (78.67%) and coughing (70.67%). Compared with the severe patients, the critically ill patients had higher proportions of patients over 60 years old with elevated white blood cell count, increased prothrombin time, and higher levels of hsCRP, PCT, D-dimer, ALT, LDH, cTnI and NT-proBNP. Univariate logistic regression analysis showed that an age over 60 years, leukocytosis, hs-CRP elevation, prolonged prothrombin time, and increased levels of D-dimer, NT-proBNP and cTnI were associated with severe COVID-19. Multivariate logistic regression showed that an age over 60 years (OR=8.165, 95% : 1.483-45.576, =0.017), prolonged prothrombin time (OR=7.516, 95% : 2.568-21.998, =0.006) and elevated NT-proBNP (OR=6.194, 95% : 1.305-29.404, =0.022) were independent risk factors for critical type of COVID-19.
CONCLUSIONS
An age over 60 years, a prolonged prothrombin time and elevated NT-proBNP level are important clinical features of critically ill patients with COVID-19, and can be deemed as early warning signals for critical conditions of the disease.
Aged
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Betacoronavirus
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Coronavirus Infections
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Critical Illness
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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Retrospective Studies