Brainstem involvement and respiratory failure in COVID-19.
Fiore ManganelliMaria VargasAniello IovinoCarmine IacovazzoLucio SantoroGiuseppe ServilloPublished in: Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology (2020)
Respiratory failure is the most worrisome problem of COVID-19. Patients may develop severe pneumonia requiring invasive mechanical ventilation and a significant proportion of them dies. It has been suggested that brainstem might play a role in severe respiratory failure of COVID-19 patients. We described three COVID-19 patients in ICU at Federico II Hospital in Naples that, although had recovered from pneumonia, could not be weaned from invasive mechanical ventilation. Our clinical evaluation was consistent with an involvement of the brainstem and especially of respiratory centre thus possibly explaining the weaning failure in patients that were awake and had recovered from lung involvement. Our data, though limited, indicate that brainstem involvement may play a role in respiratory failure and perhaps in the high death rate of COVID-19 patients. Moreover, the weaning failure from mechanical ventilation due to central respiratory drive depression might underlie the unusual long stay in ICU reported for COVID-19 patients.
Keyphrases
- mechanical ventilation
- respiratory failure
- sars cov
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- intensive care unit
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- clinical evaluation
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- ejection fraction
- coronavirus disease
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- healthcare
- early onset
- prognostic factors
- depressive symptoms
- deep brain stimulation
- machine learning
- respiratory tract
- data analysis
- patient reported outcomes