학술논문

Breath-holding as a novel approach to risk stratification in COVID-19
Document Type
article
Source
Critical Care. 25(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Lung
Clinical Research
Patient Safety
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Cardiovascular
Adult
COVID-19
Carbon Dioxide
Case-Control Studies
Humans
Hypercapnia
Inspiratory Capacity
Lung Volume Measurements
Male
Middle Aged
Desaturation
Hypoxia
Chemosensitivity
Dyspnea
Prognosis
Medical and Health Sciences
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundDespite considerable progress, it remains unclear why some patients admitted for COVID-19 develop adverse outcomes while others recover spontaneously. Clues may lie with the predisposition to hypoxemia or unexpected absence of dyspnea ('silent hypoxemia') in some patients who later develop respiratory failure. Using a recently-validated breath-holding technique, we sought to test the hypothesis that gas exchange and ventilatory control deficits observed at admission are associated with subsequent adverse COVID-19 outcomes (composite primary outcome: non-invasive ventilatory support, intensive care admission, or death).MethodsPatients with COVID-19 (N = 50) performed breath-holds to obtain measurements reflecting the predisposition to oxygen desaturation (mean desaturation after 20-s) and reduced chemosensitivity to hypoxic-hypercapnia (including maximal breath-hold duration). Associations with the primary composite outcome were modeled adjusting for baseline oxygen saturation, obesity, sex, age, and prior cardiovascular disease. Healthy controls (N = 23) provided a normative comparison.ResultsThe adverse composite outcome (observed in N = 11/50) was associated with breath-holding measures at admission (likelihood ratio test, p = 0.020); specifically, greater mean desaturation (12-fold greater odds of adverse composite outcome with 4% compared with 2% desaturation, p = 0.002) and greater maximal breath-holding duration (2.7-fold greater odds per 10-s increase, p = 0.036). COVID-19 patients who did not develop the adverse composite outcome had similar mean desaturation to healthy controls.ConclusionsBreath-holding offers a novel method to identify patients with high risk of respiratory failure in COVID-19. Greater breath-hold induced desaturation (gas exchange deficit) and greater breath-holding tolerance (ventilatory control deficit) may be independent harbingers of progression to severe disease.