Гинекология (Oct 2023)

POST-COVID-19-syndrome in young healthy women: myth or reality?

  • Tatiana E. Belokrinitskaya,
  • Nataly I. Frolova,
  • Viktor A. Mudrov,
  • Kristina A. Kargina,
  • Evgeniya A. Shametova,
  • Chimita Tch. Zhamyanova,
  • Shakhnozakhon R. Osmonova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26442/20795696.2023.3.202333
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
pp. 341 – 347

Abstract

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Aim. To assess the incidence and severity of new persistent symptoms in somatically healthy young women with and without a history of COVID-19. Materials and methods. The main study group included patients who had PCR-confirmed COVID-19 in JulyOctober 2021 (n=181); the comparison group included women without COVID-19 during this period (n=71). Inclusion criteria: female sex, age 1835 years, no pregnancy, overweight/obesity, diabetes mellitus, chronic hypertension, premenstrual syndrome, and other somatic and/or chronic infectious diseases. Post-COVID syndrome (PCS) was diagnosed based on symptoms absent before COVID-19, appeared 4 weeks from the disease onset, and lasted at least 2 months, which could not be explained by alternative diagnoses. We used primary medical records and interviewed patients using a special questionnaire to develop a statistical database. The severity of symptoms was assessed using a 10-point scale. Results. New persistent symptoms during the pandemic in young, initially somatically healthy women with and without COVID-19 were reported with similar frequency: 96.1 and 93.0%, respectively (odds ratio OR 1.88, 95% confidence interval CI 0.586.14; p2=0.327). Only patients with COVID-19 reported cough (43.6%), shortness of breath (26.5%), chest pain (18.2%), weight loss (18.8%), hair loss (60.8%); in the comparison group, these symptoms were not reported; p20.001. Patients with PCS were more likely to experience memory impairment 49.2% vs 12.7% (OR 6.66, 95% CI 3.1314.21; p20.001); headache 43.1% vs 11.3% (OR 5.96, 95% CI 2.713.17; p20.001); depression 19.9% vs 8.5% (OR 2.69, 95% CI 1.086.7; p2=0.029); myalgia 31.5% vs 8.5% (OR 4.98, 95% CI 2.0412.17; p20.001). Patients of both groups showed similar frequency of fatigue (69.0% vs 71.8%; p2=0.66), drowsiness (54.9% vs 43.6%; p2=0.11), palpitations (19.7% vs 29.8%; p2=0.1), menstrual cycle changes (22.5% vs 21.0%; p2=0.865), and skin manifestations (2.8% vs 6.6%; p2=0.24). COVID-19 survivors had a more pronounced memory impairment (4.0 vs 1.0 points; p0.001), headache (5.0 vs 3.0 points; p=0.001), myalgia (5.0 vs 1.0 points; p0.001) and less severe insomnia (3.0 vs 5.0 points; p=0.004). Conclusion. The PCS symptoms are common in initially somatically healthy women of early reproductive age. Similar symptoms in women with no history of COVID-19 may be due to post-traumatic stress anxiety disorder. Further interdisciplinary research is needed to identify the pathophysiological mechanisms for the occurrence of new persistent symptoms in different age and social groups during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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