From the Journals

RV dysfunction slams survival in acute COVID, flu, pneumonia


 

Limitations

  • The study was based primarily on a retrospective review of electronic health records, which poses a risk for misclassification.
  • Echocardiography was performed without blinding operators to patient clinical status, and echocardiograms were interpreted in a single university hospital system, so were not externally validated.
  • Because echocardiograms obtained during hospitalization could not be compared with previous echocardiograms, it could not be determined whether any of the patients had preexisting RV dilation or dysfunction.
  • Strain imaging was not feasible in many cases.

Disclosures

  • The study received no commercial funding.
  • The authors disclosed no financial relationships.

This is a summary of a preprint research study, Association of Right Ventricular Dilation and Dysfunction on Echocardiogram With In-Hospital Mortality Among Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19 Compared With Other Acute Respiratory Illness, written by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, department of medicine, and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, division of cardiology. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Skin reactions after COVID-19 vaccination have six patterns
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Experimental cancer drug promising for hospitalized COVID patients
MDedge Emergency Medicine
WHO tracking new Omicron subvariant in India
MDedge Emergency Medicine
U.S. allows pharmacists to prescribe Paxlovid directly
MDedge Emergency Medicine
‘Myriad’ dermatologic reactions after COVID-19 vaccination
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Obesity links to faster fading of COVID vaccine protection
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Children and COVID: Vaccination a harder sell in the summer
MDedge Emergency Medicine
FDA grants emergency authorization for Novavax COVID vaccine
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Shift schedule today could worsen that stroke tomorrow
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Many people becoming reinfected as BA.5 dominates new COVID-19 cases
MDedge Emergency Medicine