Using the ClinFIT COVID-19 Instrument to Assess the Functional Impairments Specific to Post-COVID-19 Patients in Romania.
Clara UrsescuGigi TeodoruSăndica BucuricăRemus Iulian NicaȘtefan Dragoș LazărMarius Nicolae PopescuIleana CiobanuMihai BerteanuPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Findings revealed diverse functional impairments in physical, psychological, and social domains among post-COVID-19 patients, with severe impairments more common in those with long-term COVID-19. Complete impairment in complex movement and paid work was noted, affecting one-third of salaried employees and forcing some to retire. In the acute phase, the most frequent functional impairments were sleep, attention, pain sensation, and exercise tolerance functions. In contrast, the most severely affected functions were exercise tolerance and mobility joint functions. Age did not positively correlate with any of the analyzed functions. In the post-acute phase, sleep, energy, and drive functions remained the most frequently affected functions, while the most severely affected was, by far, the moving around function. In the post-acute period, respiratory and respiratory muscle functions strongly correlated with all tasks related to physical activity. In the long COVID-19 phase, remunerative employment was the most severely affected function, while attention functions remained the most frequently affected, similar to the acute phase. The ClinFIT COVID-19 instrument effectively captured these impairments, underscoring the need for comprehensive rehabilitation strategies.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- coronavirus disease
- physical activity
- working memory
- mental health
- healthcare
- magnetic resonance
- skeletal muscle
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- chronic pain
- spinal cord injury
- body mass index
- high intensity
- intensive care unit
- computed tomography
- patient reported outcomes
- early onset
- neuropathic pain
- contrast enhanced
- respiratory failure