Brief Research Report: Quantitative Analysis of Potential Coronary Microvascular Disease in Suspected Long-COVID Syndrome

  • Patrick Doeblin
  • Fridolin Steinbeis
  • Cian M Scannell
  • Collin Goetze
  • Sarah Al-Tabatabaee
  • Jennifer Erley
  • Alessandro Faragli
  • Felix Pröpper
  • Martin Witzenrath
  • Thomas Zoller
  • Christian Stehning
  • Holger Gerhardt
  • Javier Sánchez-González
  • Ebraham Alskaf
  • Titus Kühne
  • Burkert Pieske
  • Carsten Tschöpe
  • Amedeo Chiribiri
  • Sebastian Kelle

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Case series have reported persistent cardiopulmonary symptoms, often termed long-COVID or post-COVID syndrome, in more than half of patients recovering from Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19). Recently, alterations in microvascular perfusion have been proposed as a possible pathomechanism in long-COVID syndrome. We examined whether microvascular perfusion, measured by quantitative stress perfusion cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), is impaired in patients with persistent cardiac symptoms post-COVID-19.

METHODS: Our population consisted of 33 patients post-COVID-19 examined in Berlin and London, 11 (33%) of which complained of persistent chest pain and 13 (39%) of dyspnea. The scan protocol included standard cardiac imaging and dual-sequence quantitative stress perfusion. Standard parameters were compared to 17 healthy controls from our institution. Quantitative perfusion was compared to published values of healthy controls.

RESULTS: The stress myocardial blood flow (MBF) was significantly lower [31.8 ± 5.1 vs. 37.8 ± 6.0 (μl/g/beat), P < 0.001] and the T2 relaxation time was significantly higher (46.2 ± 3.6 vs. 42.7 ± 2.8 ms, P = 0.002) post-COVID-19 compared to healthy controls. Stress MBF and T1 and T2 relaxation times were not correlated to the COVID-19 severity (Spearman r = -0.302, -0.070, and -0.297, respectively) or the presence of symptoms. The stress MBF showed a U-shaped relation to time from PCR to CMR, no correlation to T1 relaxation time, and a negative correlation to T2 relaxation time (Pearson r = -0.446, P = 0.029).

CONCLUSION: While we found a significantly reduced microvascular perfusion post-COVID-19 compared to healthy controls, this reduction was not related to symptoms or COVID-19 severity.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer877416
ISSN2297-055X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2022
Extern publiziertJa

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Copyright © 2022 Doeblin, Steinbeis, Scannell, Goetze, Al-Tabatabaee, Erley, Faragli, Pröpper, Witzenrath, Zoller, Stehning, Gerhardt, Sánchez-González, Alskaf, Kühne, Pieske, Tschöpe, Chiribiri and Kelle.

PubMed 35711381