1. Cardiorespiratory physiology, exertional symptoms, and psychological burden in post-COVID-19 fatigue.
- Author
-
Schaeffer, Michele R., Cowan, Juthaporn, Milne, Kathryn M., Puyat, Joseph H., Voduc, Nha, Corrales-Medina, Vicente, Lavoie, Kim L., Mulloy, Andrew, Chirinos, Julio A., Abdallah, Sara J., and Guenette, Jordan A.
- Abstract
Fatigue is a common, debilitating, and poorly understood symptom post-COVID-19. We sought to better characterize differences in those with and without post-COVID-19 fatigue using cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Despite elevated dyspnoea intensity ratings, V̇O 2 peak (ml/kg/min) was the only significant difference in the physiological responses to exercise (19.9 ± 7.1 fatigue vs. 24.4 ± 6.7 ml/kg/min non-fatigue, p = 0.04). Consistent with previous findings, we also observed a higher psychological burden in those with fatigue in the context of similar resting cardiopulmonary function. Our findings suggest that lower cardiorespiratory fitness and/or psychological factors may contribute to post-COVID-19 fatigue symptomology. Further research is needed for rehabilitation and symptom management following SARS-CoV-2 infection. • Peak ⩒O 2 (ml/kg/min) is lower in survivors with post-COVID-19 fatigue vs. without. • Dyspnoea is elevated during exercise in COVID-19 survivors with fatigue vs. without. • Higher psychological burden may contribute to post-COVID-19 fatigue symptomology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF