Silent hypoxaemia in COVID‐19 patients

Simonson TS., Baker TL., Banzett RB., Bishop T., Dempsey JA., Feldman JL., Guyenet PG., Hodson EJ., Mitchell GS., Moya EA., Nokes BT., Orr JE., Owens RL., Poulin M., Rawling JM., Schmickl CN., Watters JJ., Younes M., Malhotra A.

Abstract The clinical presentation of COVID‐19 due to infection with SARS‐CoV‐2 is highly variable with the majority of patients having mild symptoms while others develop severe respiratory failure. The reason for this variability is unclear but is in critical need of investigation. Some COVID‐19 patients have been labelled with ‘happy hypoxia’, in which patient complaints of dyspnoea and observable signs of respiratory distress are reported to be absent. Based on ongoing debate, we highlight key respiratory and neurological components that could underlie variation in the presentation of silent hypoxaemia and define priorities for subsequent investigation. image

DOI

10.1113/jp280769

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

2021-02-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

599

Pages

1057 - 1065

Total pages

8

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