Long COVID And Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Survey Of Elderly Female Survivors in Egypt

Mar 19, 2022

Menna A. E. G. Aly | Heba G. Saber


Geriatrics and Gerontology Department,  Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University,  Cairo, Egypt


For more information: ali.ma@wecistanche.com




Cistanche

Abstract


Objectives


This study aimed to investigate post-COVID-19 symptoms amongst elderly females and whether they could be a risk factor for developing chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) later on.


Methods:


This was a retrospective cross-sectional study, in the form of an online survey. A total of 115 responses were finally included.


Results


The mean age was 73.18 ± 6.42. Eighty-nine reported symptoms in the post-recovery period; of these 54 had no symptoms of CFS, 60 were possible, and only 1 was probable. Fatigue was reported by 66, musculoskeletal symptoms by 56, and sleep problems by 73. Twenty-nine patients visited a doctor's office as a result. Postrecovery symptoms were significantly related to stress, sadness and sleep disturbances. Also, stress, sadness, sleep disturbances, fatigue, cognitive impairment, and recurrent falls were all significantly associated with CFS-like symptoms.


Conclusions


From our findings, the presence of fatigue, cognitive impairment, stress, sadness, sleep disturbances and recurrent falls in the post-recovery period were all significantly associated with CFS-like symptoms. To conclude it would be reasonable to screen for long COVID and consider the potential for developing CFS later on. Whether it can be a risk factor for developing CFS-like other viral infections will need more larger-scale studies to confirm this




Acteoside of Cistanche

1 | INTRODUCTION


Over the last few months, the after-effects of COVID-19 are becoming more apparent. Terms such as “long COVID,” “post COVID syndrome” and “chronic COVID syndrome,” are gaining scientific attention. They refer to the persistence of COVID-19 symptoms in survivors, it's long-lasting effects, or developing mental health problems.1 The UK COVID symptom study reported that 10% of COVID +ve patients were still unwell after more than 3 weeks, with symptoms reported including; fatigue, headaches, coughing, sore throat, chest pain and confusion.2 Oddly the severity of the infection did not determine the incidence of developing post-COVID symptoms. The similarity of these symptoms with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), which is characterized by fatigue, non-restorative sleep and cognitive problems3 is striking, bearing in mind that post-viral infection is a recognized risk factor.4 An important opinion article in Frontiers of Medicine has also posed this question; can COVID-19 cause CFS?5 There is increasing concern that COVID-19 may significantly add to the numbers of unrecognized CFS.6 In recent literature, there is a leaning towards early recognition of CFS symptoms in those recovering from COVID. Perrin et al justify early identification and treatment of post-viral fatigue to help prevent adding to the existing burden of CFS on health services. They also highlighted that this should be a priority for research.7 In older adults chronic fatigue is a significant problem that can negatively impact their health and quality of life,8 and CFS tends to be more predominant among women.9 Additionally, elderly patients are also more vulnerable to COVID infection and its complications, particularly those with existing comorbidities.10 The aim of this work was to study the presence of post-COVID symptoms amongst elderly Egyptian females recovering from COVID-19 and to explore the relationship with CFS which could be a potential long-lasting complication.


2 | MATERIALS AND METHODS


We performed a retrospective cross-sectional study, in the form of an online survey targeting females over the age of sixty, conducted from mid-September till mid-October 2020. The questionnaire was distributed online via social media platforms. The research was conducted ethically in accordance with the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki, and all participants gave informed consent. Inclusion criteria included being over the age of 60, being female with a history of COVID-19 infection confirmed by PCR, and at least 1 month must have passed since testing negative for COVID-19. Cases unconfirmed by PCR were excluded, as well as those with a history of pre-existing depression, CFS, or fibromyalgia, as well as incomplete responses. The sample size was calculated using PASS program version 15, setting the type-1 error (α) at 0.05 and the confidence interval width at 0.06 (margin of error 7.5%). Results from a previous study11 showed that the prevalence of chronic idiopathic fatigue among survived COVID cases was 10%. Calculation according to these values produced a minimal sample size of 97 cases. A total of 121 ladies responded but 6 of these were excluded and 115 were finally included. The questionnaire (see Appendix) was available in both Arabic and English and covered the following: Recovery duration, time till complete resolution of symptoms, presence of post-recovery symptoms in general, specific symptoms (neurological, sleep, nasopharyngeal, gastrointestinal, chest, cardiac, musculoskeletal and nephrological), whether they had visited a doctor recently as a result. In view of the importance of recognizing as soon as possible any likelihood of developing CFS symptoms, we collected the sample early in the pandemic. Our aim was to suggest the possibility or probability of developing CFS in the future. Accordingly, responders were then grouped according to their symptoms as those who had clinical symptoms of CFS but 4 months had not elapsed (possible), those with symptoms and 4 months had passed (probable) and finally those who had none of these. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS 25.0 program. Mean, standard deviation (±SD) and range were used for parametric numerical data, while Median and Interquartile range (IQR) for non-parametric numerical data. Fisher's exact test was used to examine the relationship between two qualitative variables when the expected count is less than 5 in more than 20% of cells. P-value <.05 was considered statistically significant.


3 | RESULTS


A total of 115 complete responses were recorded, all were ladies. The mean age was 73.18 ± 6.42. Regarding marital status; 87 (75.7%)were married, 6 (%5.2) were single/divorced, and 22 (19.1%) were widowed. When asked about education 6 (5.2%) had completed primary education, 45 (39.1%) had middle school, and 64 (55.7%) had high school or higher. Eighty-nine (77.4%) reported having symptoms in the post-recovery period; of these 54 (47%) had no symptoms of CFS, 60 (52.2%) were possible, and only 1 was probable. Table 1 shows the frequency of symptoms reported in the post-recovery period. Of note, fatigue was reported by 66 (57.4%) responders, musculoskeletal symptoms by 56 (48.6%), and sleep problems by 73 (63.47%). Twenty-nine (25.2%) patients visited a doctor's office as a result. The presence of post-recovery symptoms was significantly related to stress (P = .005), sadness (P = .007) and sleep disturbances (P < .001) whether increased, fractured or insomnia. Table 2 shows the relationship between the different kinds of post-recovery symptoms reported and CFS (as classified above). Stress, sadness, sleep disturbances, along with fatigue, cognitive impairment, and recurrent falls were all significantly associated with CFS-like symptoms. However, duration till recovery and number of days passed since recovery was not related to CFS-like symptoms with P-values of .304 and .234, respectively.


Echinacoside of Cistanche

4 | DISCUSSION


This survey targeted elderly females and aimed to investigate post-COVID-19 symptoms and whether they could be a risk factor for developing CFS later on. Symptoms persisted for more than a month in 33% of the responders. This was somewhat higher than the findings of the “UK COVID Symptom study”2 but closer to a multistate survey conducted in the US which found that 35% had not returned to their usual state of 2-3 weeks after testing negative for COVID-19.12


image

image

image

image

image



An Italian study reported that 87% of those discharged from hospital had at least one symptom 2 months later.13 Notably, only 25.2% of the participants recorded new doctor visits as a result of these symptoms. This discrepancy may point to a lack of awareness of the longer effects of COVID-19 infection. Advocating for active follow-up of COVID patients may seem justifiable. Fatigue, musculoskeletal symptoms, sleep problems, headache, cognitive problems, sore throat, malaise, dizziness and palpitations, among others were frequently reported by the responders. This wide array of complaints was similar to those of Assaf et al who also surveyed prolonged COVID symptoms.14 The nature and closeness of these symptoms to CFS prompted us to study this relationship. 


Flavonoids of Cistanche


Participants who complained of fatigue, cognitive problems, recurrent falls, stress, sadness, and sleep problems were significantly related to CFS possibility or probability. Islam et al's review article also highlighted this potential link between post-COVID fatigue and CFS.15 Even though the exact etiology of CFS is unknown there is agreement that it is a multifactorial entity that can be initiated by several factors. A recognized stimulus is a viral infection. This causal association has been established with EBV, influenza and other coronaviruses. The mechanism proposed is triggering of inflammatory and autoimmune response as well as the resulting neurological sequelae of post-infectious neuro-invasion. Which in turn causes the clinical manifestations of CFS.16 Whether COVID-19 infection can initiate the same response has been discussed by several authors. Rodriguez et al confirmed that COVID-19 can cause a significant inflammatory and auto-immune response,17 and a Mexican cohort study found that symptoms of CFS overlapped significantly with those of long COVID syndrome.18 The limitation of this work is the small sample size and it only focuses on one subset of patients.


image

image

image

image


5 | CONCLUSION


From our findings, the presence of fatigue, cognitive impairment, stress, sadness, sleep disturbances, and recurrent falls in the post-recovery period were all significantly associated with CFS-like symptoms. To conclude it would be reasonable to screen for long COVID and consider the potential for developing CFS later on. Whether it can be a risk factor for developing CFS-like other viral infections will need more larger-scale studies to confirm this.


Cistanche product

This is our anti-fatigue product! Click the picture to cistanche stem products





REFERENCES


1. Mahase E. Covid-19: what do we know about “long covid”? BMJ. 2020;370:m2815. 

2. Sudre C, Lee K, Lochlainn M. Symptom clusters in COVID-19: a potential clinical prediction tool from the COVID Symptom Study app. Sci Adv. 2021;7. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abd4177 

3. Jason LA, Sundquist M, Brown A, et al. Examining case definition criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalomyelitis. Fatigue. 2014;2:40-56. 

4. Lam MH, Wing YK, Yu MW, et al. Mental morbidities and chronic fatigue in severe acute respiratory syndrome survivors: long-term follow-up. Arch Intern Med. 2009;169:2142-2147. 

5. Komaroff AL, Bateman L. Will COVID-19 lead to myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome? Front Med. 2021;18:1132. 

6. Araja D, Berkis U, Lunga A, Murovska M. Shadow burden of undiagnosed myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) on society: retrospective and prospective—in light of COVID-19. J Clin Med. 2021;10:3017. 

7. Perrin R, Riste L, Hann M, Walther A, Mukherjee A, Heald A. Into the looking glass: post-viral syndrome post-COVID-19. Med Hypotheses. 2020;144:110055. 

8. Zengarini E, Ruggiero C, Pérez-Zepeda MU, et al. Fatigue: relevance and implications in the aging population. Exp Gerontol. 2015;70:78-83. 

9. Jason LA, Taylor RR, Kennedy CL, Song S, Johnson D, Torres S. Chronic fatigue syndrome: occupation, medical utilization, and subtypes in a community-based sample. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2000;188:568-576. 

10. Wang L, He W, Yu X, et al. Coronavirus disease 2019 in elderly patients: characteristics and prognostic factors based on 4-week follow-up. J Infect. 2020;80:639-645. 

11. Simani L, Ramezani M, Darazam IA, et al. Prevalence and correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome and post-traumatic stress disorder after the outbreak of the COVID-19. J Neurovirol. 2021;27:154-159. 

12. Tenforde MW, Kim SS, Lindsell CJ, et al. Symptom duration and risk factors for delayed return to usual health among outpatients with COVID-19 in a multistate health care systems network — United States, March–June 2020. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly. Rep. 2020;69:993-998. 

13. Carfì A, Bernabei R, Landi F; Gemelli Against COVID-19 Post-Acute Care Study Group. Persistent symptoms in patients after acute covid-19. JAMA. 2020;324:603-605. doi:10.1001/ JAMA.2020.12603 

14. Assaf G, Davis H, McCorkell L, et al. Patient-led research collaborative: embedding patients in the Long COVID narrative. PAIN Reports. 2021;6:e913. https://doi.org/10.1097/pr9.0000000000000913 

15. Islam MF, Cotler J, Jason LA. Post-viral fatigue and COVID-19: lessons from past epidemics. Fatigue. 2020;8:61-69. 

16. Poenaru S, Abdallah SJ, Corrales-Medina V, Cowan J. COVID-19 and post-infectious myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: a narrative review. Ther Adv Infect Dis. 2021;8:20499361211009385. 

17. Rodríguez Y, Novelli L, Rojas M, et al. Autoinflammatory and autoimmune conditions at the crossroad of COVID-19. J Autoimmun. 2020;114:102506. 

18. González-Hermosillo JA, Martínez-López JP, Carrillo-Lampón SA, et al. Post-acute COVID-19 symptoms, a potential link with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: a 6-month survey in a Mexican cohort. Brain Sci. 2021;11:760.












You Might Also Like