1. Chronic fatigue syndrome: an emerging sequela in COVID-19 survivors?
- Author
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Sara Mariotto, Elisa Mantovani, Stefano Tamburin, Gianluigi Dorelli, Silvia Bozzetti, Ernesto Crisafulli, Sergio Ferrari, Domenico Girelli, Daniele Gabbiani, Angela Federico, and Serena Zanzoni
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Short Communication ,Encephalomyelitis ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Cognition ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Chronic fatigue syndrome ,Humans ,Fatigue ,Aged ,Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic ,Lung ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Neuropsychology ,COVID-19 ,virus diseases ,Sequela ,Middle Aged ,Functional neurological disorders ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,respiratory tract diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Viral infection ,Mood alterations ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,human activities - Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 survivors may report persistent symptoms that resemble myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). We explored (a) ME/CFS-like symptom prevalence and (b) whether axonal, inflammatory, and/or lung changes may contribute to ME/CFS-like symptoms in SARS-CoV-2 survivors through clinical, neuropsychiatric, neuropsychological, lung function assessment, and serum neurofilament light chain, an axonal damage biomarker. ME/CFS-like features were found in 27% of our sample. ME/CFS-like group showed worse sleep quality, fatigue, pain, depressive symptoms, subjective cognitive complaints, Borg baseline dyspnea of the 6-min walking test vs. those without ME/CFS-like symptoms. These preliminary findings raise concern on a possible future ME/CFS-like pandemic in SARS-CoV-2 survivors.
- Published
- 2021
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