City
Epaper

Covid can increase risk of death among acute heart failure patients

By IANS | Published: January 07, 2021 6:10 PM

London, Jan 7 Patients with acute heart failure nearly double their risk of dying if they get Covid-19, ...

Open in App

London, Jan 7 Patients with acute heart failure nearly double their risk of dying if they get Covid-19, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, said emphasising the need for patients with heart failure to take extra precautions.

"Our results support prioritising heart failure patients for Covid-19 vaccination once it is available," said the lead researcher Amardeep Dastidar, Consultant Interventional Cardiologist at North Bristol NHS Trust and Bristol Heart Institute, UK.

"In the meantime, heart failure patients of all ages should be considered a high-risk group and be advised to maintain social distance and wear a face mask to prevent infection," he added.

Heart failure refers to progressive weakening of the heart's pump function with symptoms of breathlessness, ankle swelling and fatigue. Sudden and severe worsening of symptoms is called acute heart failure this is a medical emergency and requires admission to hospital for intravenous medication and intensive monitoring.

For the study, the team examined referral rates for acute heart failure during the pandemic and 30-day mortality. The analysis included 283 patients with acute heart failure. Two-thirds of the patients had chronic heart failure and presented with acute deterioration.

There was a substantial, but statistically non-significant, drop in admissions for acute heart failure during the pandemic.

A total of 164 patients were admitted in the eight weeks before-Covid compared to 119 patients after-Covid - a 27 per cent reduction. The 30-day mortality rate of patients with acute heart failure nearly doubled during the pandemic. Some 11 per cent of patients in the before-Covid group died within 30 days compared to 21 per cent of the after-Covid group.

"This may suggest a direct interaction or susceptibility to worse outcomes for acute heart failure patients with superimposed Covid infection," the researcher said. "It is noteworthy that our region had very low rates of Covid infection during the study and yet a connection with higher mortality was still apparent," he added.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: North Bristol NHS TrustBristol heart instituteAmardeep dastidarukLondonPremier of saAdministrative capital
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalLondon Stabbing: 13-Year-Old Boy Killed, Four Injured in Sword Attack Near Tube Station

InternationalLondon Stabbing: Several Stabbed, Including Two Police Officers Near Hainault Tube Station; Scary Video of Man With Sword Goes Viral

InternationalLondon: Overseas Friends of Bjp UK Organises Spectacular ‘Run for Modi’ Event

InternationalLondon: Five Injured After Blood-Soaked Royal Horses Escape, Collide with Cars; Videos Go Viral

EntertainmentCheck Out: Alia Bhatt Is All Set To Host Her First ‘Hope Gala’ in London

Health Realted Stories

HealthStudy calls for making cardiorespiratory fitness a part of annual check-up

HealthNew Vitamin C-rich bandage to boost burn healing

HealthStudy shows how E. coli causes urinary tract infections

NationalFSSAI Increases Pesticide Residue Limit Tenfold in Herbs and Spices

HealthPalestinian president undergoes routine medical examinations in West Bank