1. COVID-19-Related Cardiovascular Disease and Practical Considerations for Perioperative Clinicians.
- Author
-
Gerstein NS, Venkataramani R, Goumas AM, Chapman NN, and Deriy L
- Subjects
- Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, Cardiovascular Diseases physiopathology, Coronavirus Infections physiopathology, Humans, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral physiopathology, SARS-CoV-2, Cardiovascular Diseases complications, Coronavirus Infections complications, Perioperative Care methods, Pneumonia, Viral complications
- Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has a clinical course predominated by acute respiratory failure due to viral pneumonia with possible acute respiratory distress syndrome. However, nearly one third of infected patients, especially those with preexisting cardiovascular (CV) disease, are reported to present with some combination of acute cardiac injury, myocarditis, heart failure, cardiogenic shock, or significant dysrhythmias. In addition, COVID-19 infections are also associated with high rates of thromboembolic and disseminated intravascular coagulation complications. Severe myocarditis and heart failure have both been reported as the initial presenting conditions in COVID-19 infection. This review highlights the important considerations related to the CV manifestations of COVID-19 infections, describes the mechanisms and clinical presentation of CV injury, and provides practical management and therapy suggestions. This narrative review is based primarily on the multiple case series and cohorts from the largest initial COVID-19 outbreak centers (ie, Wuhan, China, and Italy); hence, nearly all presented data and findings are retrospective in nature with the attendant limitations of such reports.
- Published
- 2020
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