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Long COVID and Post-infective Fatigue Syndrome: A Review
Author(s) -
Carolina X. Sandler,
Vegard Bruun Wyller,
Rona MossMorris,
Dedra Buchwald,
Esther Crawley,
Jeannine L.A. Hautvast,
Ben Z. Katz,
Hans Knoop,
Paul Little,
Renée R. Taylor,
KnutArne Wensaas,
Andrew R. Lloyd
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
open forum infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.546
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 2328-8957
DOI - 10.1093/ofid/ofab440
Subject(s) - medicine , mood , covid-19 , cohort , cohort study , chronic fatigue syndrome , prospective cohort study , psychiatry , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Fatigue is a dominant feature of both acute and convalescent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) (sometimes termed “long-COVID”), with up to 46% of patients reporting fatigue that lasts from weeks to months. The investigators of the international Collaborative on Fatigue Following Infection (COFFI) conducted a systematic review of post-COVID fatigue and a narrative review on fatigue after other infections, and made recommendations for clinical and research approaches to assessing fatigue after COVID-19. In the majority of COVID-19 cohort studies, persistent fatigue was reported by a significant minority of patients, ranging from 13% to 33% at 16–20 weeks post-symptom onset. Data from the prospective cohort studies in COFFI and others indicate that fatigue is also a prevalent outcome from many acute systemic infections, notably infectious mononucleosis, with a case rate for clinically significant Post-infective fatigue after exclusion of recognized medical and psychiatric causes, ranging from 10%–35% at 6 months. To better characterize post-COVID fatigue, the COFFI investigators recommend the following: application of validated screening questionnaires for case detection; standardized interviews encompassing fatigue, mood, and other symptoms; and investigative approaches to identify end-organ damage and mental health conditions.

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