Covid long-haulers may experience abnormal breathing, chronic fatigue: Study

The researchers noted that many COVID-19 patients have reported persistent symptoms after they recover

Update: 2021-11-30 07:29 GMT
The consortium identified 1,787 patients with cancer and COVID-19 for the study, the vast majority of which were unvaccinated. (Photo: AP/File)

Washington: Many long-haul COVID-19 patients have chronic fatigue syndrome and other breathing issues months after their initial diagnosis, according to a study.

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a medical condition that can often occur after a viral infection and cause fever, aching, and prolonged tiredness and depression.

The study, published in the journal JACC: Heart Failure, is the first of its kind to identify a correlation between long-haul COVID-19 and chronic fatigue syndrome.

The researchers noted that many COVID-19 patients, some who were never hospitalised, have reported persistent symptoms after they recover from their initial COVID-19 diagnosis.

These patients have Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC) but are more commonly referred to as "long-haulers," the researchers said.

Severe fatigue, cognitive difficulty, unrefreshing sleep and muscle aches and pains have all been considered major symptoms for PASC patients, which is similar to what researchers saw after the 2005 SARS-CoV-1 epidemic, they said.

In that epidemic 27 per cent of patients fulfilled criteria for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) after four years.

In the latest study, researchers looked at 41 patients -- 23 women and 18 men -- with an age range of 23 to 69 years.

Patients were referred to the prospective study from pulmonologists or cardiologists and all had normal pulmonary function tests, chest X-rays, chest CT scans and echocardiograms.

Patients had been previously diagnosed with acute COVID-19 infection for a range of three to 15 months before undergoing the cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) and continued to experience unexplained shortness of breath.

"Recovery from acute COVID infection can be associated with residual organ damage," said Donna M. Mancini, professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, US and lead author of the study.

"Many of these patients reported shortness of breath, and the cardiopulmonary exercise test is often used to determine its underlying cause," Mancini said.

The researchers noted that CPET results demonstrate several abnormalities including reduced exercise capacity, excessive ventilatory response and abnormal breathing patterns which would impact their normal daily life activities.

Before exercising, patients underwent interviews to assess for ME/CFS.

They were asked to estimate how much in the previous six months had fatigue reduced their activity at work, in their personal life or in school.

The patients were also asked how often they had experienced sore throat, tender lymph nodes, headache, muscle aches, joint stiffness, unrefreshing sleep, difficulty concentrating or worsening of symptoms after mild exertion.

ME/CFS was considered present if at least one of the first criteria were rated as being impacted substantially and at least four symptoms in the second criteria were rated as moderate or greater.

The study found that almost half (46 per cent) of patients met the criteria for ME/CFS.

Patients while connected to an electrocardiogram, pulse oximeter and blood pressure cuff, were seated on a stationary bicycle and used a disposable mouthpiece for measurement of expired gases and other ventilatory parameters.

After a brief rest period, the patients began exercises which increased in difficulty by 25 watts every three minutes. Peak oxygen consumption (VO2), carbon dioxide (CO2) production and ventilatory rate, and volume were measured.

Almost all the patients (88 per cent) exhibited abnormal breathing patterns referred to as dysfunctional breathing defined as rapid, shallow breathing, the researchers said.

Patients also had low CO2 values at rest and with exercise, suggesting chronic hyperventilation, they said.

"These findings suggest that in a subgroup of long haulers, hyperventilation and/or dysfunctional breathing may underlie their symptoms. This is important as these abnormalities may be addressed with breathing exercises or 'retraining,'" said Mancini.

The researchers acknowledged several limitations to their study. They noted that study was a small, single-centre observational research.

Also, a selection bias may have occurred as the researchers studied patients with predominantly unexplained dyspnea or shortness of breath.

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