International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences. 14/dez/2021;35(1):65-7.

Cause or Consequence? What is the Relationship between Cardiac Injury and COVID-19 Severity?

Claudio Tinoco Mesquita

DOI: 10.36660/ijcs.20210270

In most patients, coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) causes minor respiratory symptoms or even no symptoms. SARS-CoV-2 infection can also cause extrapulmonary manifestations and complications. COVID-19 is more severe and fatal among patients with pre-existing cardiovascular risk factors or diseases. Increases in cardiac troponin (cTn) are indicative of myocardial injury and frequently found in patients with COVID-19. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention published a survey demonstrating that among patients diagnosed with COVID-19, 13% had hypertension, 5% had diabetes mellitus, and 4% had a history of cardiovascular disease. However, in this same cohort, among patients who had not survived, 40% had hypertension, 20% had diabetes, and 22% had pre-existing cardiovascular disease. Patients with cardiovascular disease had the highest case fatality rate (10.5%).

In this issue of the International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences, Rocha et al. , studied 192 patients admitted with COVID-19 in a quaternary care cardiac hospital in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Mortality rate was 28%. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that elevated cTnI levels (OR=9.504; 95% CI=1.281–70.528; P=0.028) upon admission and the need for mechanical ventilation during hospitalization (OR=46.691; 95% CI=2.360–923.706; P=0.012) were independent predictors of death during hospitalization. The main limitations of the study are a sample from a single Brazilian metropolitan region and a short follow-up period. However, these limitations do not invalidate the main message of the study: the measurement of cardiac troponin at hospital admission may be useful for identification of high-risk patients infected by SARS-CoV-2.

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Cause or Consequence? What is the Relationship between Cardiac Injury and COVID-19 Severity?

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