Baroreflex sensitivity is impaired in survivors of mild COVID‐19 at 3–6 months of clinical recovery; association with carotid artery stiffness

Author:

Srivastava Prachi1,Nabeel P. M.2,Raj Kiran V.3,Soneja Manish4,Chandran Dinu S.1ORCID,Joseph Jayaraj23,Wig Naveet4,Jaryal Ashok Kumar1,Thijssen Dick5,Deepak Kishore Kumar1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

2. Healthcare Technology Innovation Center Indian Institute of Technology Madras India

3. Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology Madras India

4. Department of Medicine All India Institute of Medical Sciences New Delhi India

5. Department of Physiology Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractThe association between the stiffening of barosensitive regions of central arteries and the derangements in baroreflex functions remains unexplored in COVID‐19 survivors. Fifty‐seven survivors of mild COVID‐19 (defined as presence of upper respiratory tract symptoms and/or fever without shortness of breath or hypoxia; SpO2 > 93%), with an age range of 22–66 years (27 females) participated at 3–6 months of recovering from the acute phase of RT‐PCR positive COVID‐19. Healthy volunteers whose baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) and arterial stiffness data were acquired prior to the onset of the pandemic constituted the control group. BRS was found to be significantly lower in the COVID survivor group for the systolic blood pressure‐based sequences (BRSSBP) [9.78 (7.16–17.74) ms/mmHg vs 16.5 (11.25–23.78) ms/mmHg; p = 0.0253]. The COVID survivor group showed significantly higher carotid β stiffness index [7.16 (5.75–8.18) vs 5.64 (4.34–6.96); (p = 0.0004)], and pulse wave velocity β (PWVβ) [5.67 (4.96–6.32) m/s vs 5.12 (4.37–5.41) m/s; p = 0.0002]. BRS quantified by both the sequence and spectral methods showed an inverse correlation with PWVβ in the male survivors. Impairment of BRS in the male survivors of mild COVID‐19 at 3–6 months of clinical recovery shows association with carotid artery stiffness.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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