Protocol of the Long-COVID Patients Causal Diagnosis and Rehabilitation Randomized Feasibility Controlled Trial in Patients with Dysautonomia: The LoCoDiRe-Dys Study
Dimitrios Spaggoulakis,
Antonios Kontaxakis,
Andreas Asimakos,
Stavroula Spetsioti,
Archontoula Antonoglou,
Pantelis Gounopoulos,
Martha Katsarou,
Helen Iasonidou,
Stergios-Stylianos Gatzonis,
Paraskevi Katsaounou
Affiliations
Dimitrios Spaggoulakis
First Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
Antonios Kontaxakis
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Department, 414 Military Hospital of Special Diseases, 15236 Penteli, Greece
Andreas Asimakos
First Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
Stavroula Spetsioti
First Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
Archontoula Antonoglou
First Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
1st Department of Neurosurgery, “Evangelismos” Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
Paraskevi Katsaounou
First Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece
Dysautonomia in the post-COVID-19 condition appears to affect a significant number of patients, with reports raising the incidence up to 61%, having an overlap with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome. Quality of life and daily function are significantly impacted and conservative management interventions, despite the lack of high-quality evidence to date, are needed to ameliorate disability. A total of 50 adults with a dysautonomia post-COVID-19 diagnosis based on the Ewing battery and a NASA lean test will be enrolled in a randomized single blinded controlled trial with a crossover design. Feasibility and lack of definite dysautonomia diagnosis will be the primary outcomes, while secondary outcomes will be health-related, clinical and cardiopulmonary exercise test indicators. Safety and acceptance will also be checked, primarily excluding participants with post-exertional malaise. The Long-COVID patients Causal Diagnosis and Rehabilitation study in patients with Dysautonomia (LoCoDiRE-Dys) intervention will consist of an educational module, breathing retraining and an individualized exercise intervention of biweekly sessions for two months with regular assessment of both groups. LoCoDiRe-Dys aims to be the first post-COVID-19 randomized study in people with dysautonomia offering a multimodal intervention both in diagnosis and management. The need for evidence in effectively supporting patients is eminent.