Affiliation:
1. Department of Cellular and Molecular Nutrition, School of Nutritional Sciences and Dietetics, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
2. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Iranshahr University of Medical Sciences, Iran
3. Department of Nursing, Damavand Branch, Islamic Azad University, Iran
Abstract
Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a global pandemic impacting 213 countries/territories and more than 5,934,936 patients worldwide. Cardiac injury has been reported to occur in severe and death cases. This meta-analysis was done to summarize available findings on the association between cardiac injury and severity of COVID-19 infection. Online databases including Scopus, PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library and Google Scholar were searched to detect relevant publications up to 20 May 2020, using relevant keywords. To pool data, a fixed- or random-effects model was used depending on the heterogeneity between studies. In total, 22 studies with 3684 COVID-19 infected patients (severe cases=1095 and death cases=365) were included in this study. Higher serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (weighted mean difference (WMD) =108.86 U/L, 95% confidence interval (CI)=75.93–141.79, p<0.001) and creatine kinase-MB (WMD=2.60 U/L, 95% CI=1.32–3.88, p<0.001) were associated with a significant increase in the severity of COVID-19 infection. Furthermore, higher serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (WMD=213.44 U/L, 95% CI=129.97–296.92, p<0.001), cardiac troponin I (WMD=26.35 pg/mL, 95% CI=14.54–38.15, p<0.001), creatine kinase (WMD=48.10 U/L, 95% CI=0.27–95.94, p = 0.049) and myoglobin (WMD=159.77 ng/mL, 95% CI=99.54–220.01, p<0.001) were associated with a significant increase in the mortality of COVID-19 infection. Cardiac injury, as assessed by serum analysis (lactate dehydrogenase, cardiac troponin I, creatine kinase (-MB) and myoglobin), was associated with severe outcome and death from COVID-19 infection.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
50 articles.
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