POST-COVID-19-syndrome in young healthy women: myth or reality?

Author:

Belokrinitskaya Tatiana E.ORCID,Frolova Nataly I.ORCID,Mudrov Viktor A.ORCID,Kargina Kristina A.ORCID,Shametova Evgeniya A.ORCID,Zhamyanova Chimita Tch.ORCID,Osmonova Shakhnozakhon R.ORCID

Abstract

Aim. To assess the incidence and severity of new persistent symptoms in somatically healthy young women with and without a history of COVID-19. Materials and methods. The main study group included patients who had PCR-confirmed COVID-19 in JulyOctober 2021 (n=181); the comparison group included women without COVID-19 during this period (n=71). Inclusion criteria: female sex, age 1835 years, no pregnancy, overweight/obesity, diabetes mellitus, chronic hypertension, premenstrual syndrome, and other somatic and/or chronic infectious diseases. Post-COVID syndrome (PCS) was diagnosed based on symptoms absent before COVID-19, appeared 4 weeks from the disease onset, and lasted at least 2 months, which could not be explained by alternative diagnoses. We used primary medical records and interviewed patients using a special questionnaire to develop a statistical database. The severity of symptoms was assessed using a 10-point scale. Results. New persistent symptoms during the pandemic in young, initially somatically healthy women with and without COVID-19 were reported with similar frequency: 96.1 and 93.0%, respectively (odds ratio OR 1.88, 95% confidence interval CI 0.586.14; p2=0.327). Only patients with COVID-19 reported cough (43.6%), shortness of breath (26.5%), chest pain (18.2%), weight loss (18.8%), hair loss (60.8%); in the comparison group, these symptoms were not reported; p20.001. Patients with PCS were more likely to experience memory impairment 49.2% vs 12.7% (OR 6.66, 95% CI 3.1314.21; p20.001); headache 43.1% vs 11.3% (OR 5.96, 95% CI 2.713.17; p20.001); depression 19.9% vs 8.5% (OR 2.69, 95% CI 1.086.7; p2=0.029); myalgia 31.5% vs 8.5% (OR 4.98, 95% CI 2.0412.17; p20.001). Patients of both groups showed similar frequency of fatigue (69.0% vs 71.8%; p2=0.66), drowsiness (54.9% vs 43.6%; p2=0.11), palpitations (19.7% vs 29.8%; p2=0.1), menstrual cycle changes (22.5% vs 21.0%; p2=0.865), and skin manifestations (2.8% vs 6.6%; p2=0.24). COVID-19 survivors had a more pronounced memory impairment (4.0 vs 1.0 points; p0.001), headache (5.0 vs 3.0 points; p=0.001), myalgia (5.0 vs 1.0 points; p0.001) and less severe insomnia (3.0 vs 5.0 points; p=0.004). Conclusion. The PCS symptoms are common in initially somatically healthy women of early reproductive age. Similar symptoms in women with no history of COVID-19 may be due to post-traumatic stress anxiety disorder. Further interdisciplinary research is needed to identify the pathophysiological mechanisms for the occurrence of new persistent symptoms in different age and social groups during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Publisher

Consilium Medicum

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

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