Metabolic Syndrome And Clinical Outcomes In A Sample Of Egyptian Patients Infected With COVID-19
Dr Marwa Sayed Daif; Tamer Mohamed Ibraheem; Amr Mahmoud Mohamed Abd El -Hady Saleh;
Abstract
besity, diabetes, and hypertension are the three main
components of the metabolic syndrome and risk factors for developing
severe COVID-19 infection. The pro-inflammatory state of metabolic
syndrome may be responsible for associated complications of COVID
19.
Methodology: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study
in Ain Shams University Isolation Hospital. A total number of 101
patients were recruited during the period from June 2021 to December
2021 , and they were divided into two groups based on whether they
had the metabolic syndrome or not.
Results: The majority of the admitted patients with COVID-19
were obese class I with mean = 34.72 kg/m2, and 57.4% of them were
males.
59.6% of patients with metabolic syndrome had hypoxia in
comparison to 38.9% of non metabolic syndrome patients who had
hypoxia. They were also more vulnerable for admission in ICU than
non metabolic syndrome patients , 38 (80.9%) vs 28 (51.9%)
respectively.
We found also statistically significant difference between patients
with metabolic syndrome and non metabolic syndrome patients
regarding medications and the need to receive methyl prednisolone and
tocilizumab to suppress the cytokine storm, (36.2% )versus (3.7 % ) ,
(21.3 %) versus ( 1.9 %),(p value =0.01 ) and (p value =0.02 )
respectively.
Conclusion: Metabolic syndrome is a strong risk factor for
hospitalization and morbidity in a global population of hospitalized
patients with COVID-19.
components of the metabolic syndrome and risk factors for developing
severe COVID-19 infection. The pro-inflammatory state of metabolic
syndrome may be responsible for associated complications of COVID
19.
Methodology: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study
in Ain Shams University Isolation Hospital. A total number of 101
patients were recruited during the period from June 2021 to December
2021 , and they were divided into two groups based on whether they
had the metabolic syndrome or not.
Results: The majority of the admitted patients with COVID-19
were obese class I with mean = 34.72 kg/m2, and 57.4% of them were
males.
59.6% of patients with metabolic syndrome had hypoxia in
comparison to 38.9% of non metabolic syndrome patients who had
hypoxia. They were also more vulnerable for admission in ICU than
non metabolic syndrome patients , 38 (80.9%) vs 28 (51.9%)
respectively.
We found also statistically significant difference between patients
with metabolic syndrome and non metabolic syndrome patients
regarding medications and the need to receive methyl prednisolone and
tocilizumab to suppress the cytokine storm, (36.2% )versus (3.7 % ) ,
(21.3 %) versus ( 1.9 %),(p value =0.01 ) and (p value =0.02 )
respectively.
Conclusion: Metabolic syndrome is a strong risk factor for
hospitalization and morbidity in a global population of hospitalized
patients with COVID-19.
Other data
| Title | Metabolic Syndrome And Clinical Outcomes In A Sample Of Egyptian Patients Infected With COVID-19 | Authors | Dr Marwa Sayed Daif ; Tamer Mohamed Ibraheem; Amr Mahmoud Mohamed Abd El -Hady Saleh | Keywords | Key words: COVID-19 and Met S | Issue Date | 3-Sep-2023 | Publisher | Online ISSN: 2735-3540 | Journal | Online ISSN: 2735-3540 | Volume | 74 | Issue | 3 | DOI | Online ISSN: 2735-3540 |
Attached Files
| File | Description | Size | Format | Existing users please Login |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| paper 5.pdf | METABOLIC SYNDROME AND CLINICAL OUTCOMES IN A SAMPLE OF EGYPTIAN PATIENTS INFECTED WITH COVID-19 | 332.12 kB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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