1. Neuropsychiatric complications of coronavirus disease 2019: Mount Sinai Health System cohort study.
- Author
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Gururangan, Kapil, Peschansky, Veronica J., Van Hyfte, Grace, Agarwal, Parul, Blank, Leah J., Mathew, Brian, Goldstein, Jonathan, Kwon, Churl-Su, McCarthy, Louise, Cohen, Ariella, Chan, Andy Ho Wing, Deng, Pojen, Dhamoon, Mandip, Gutzwiller, Eveline, Hao, Qing, He, Celestine, Klenofsky, Britany, Lemus, Hernan Nicolas, Marcuse, Lara, and Navis, Allison
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,DISEASE complications ,COHORT analysis ,MEDICAL record databases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CORONAVIRUS diseases - Abstract
Objective: To describe the frequency of neuropsychiatric complications among hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and their association with pre-existing comorbidities and clinical outcomes. Methods: We retrospectively identified all patients hospitalized with COVID-19 within a large multicenter New York City health system between March 15, 2020 and May 17, 2021 and randomly selected a representative cohort for detailed chart review. Clinical data, including the occurrence of neuropsychiatric complications (categorized as either altered mental status [AMS] or other neuropsychiatric complications) and in-hospital mortality, were extracted using an electronic medical record database and individual chart review. Associations between neuropsychiatric complications, comorbidities, laboratory findings, and in-hospital mortality were assessed using multivariate logistic regression. Results: Our study cohort consisted of 974 patients, the majority were admitted during the first wave of the pandemic. Patients were treated with anticoagulation (88.4%), glucocorticoids (24.8%), and remdesivir (10.5%); 18.6% experienced severe COVID-19 pneumonia (evidenced by ventilator requirement). Neuropsychiatric complications occurred in 58.8% of patients; 39.8% experienced AMS; and 19.0% experienced at least one other complication (seizures in 1.4%, ischemic stroke in 1.6%, hemorrhagic stroke in 1.0%) or symptom (headache in 11.4%, anxiety in 6.8%, ataxia in 6.3%). Higher odds of mortality, which occurred in 22.0%, were associated with AMS, ventilator support, increasing age, and higher serum inflammatory marker levels. Anticoagulant therapy was associated with lower odds of mortality and AMS. Conclusion: Neuropsychiatric complications of COVID-19, especially AMS, were common, varied, and associated with in-hospital mortality in a diverse multicenter cohort at an epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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