COVID-19 Hypoxia: New Research Provides Possible Explanations For ‘Happy Hypoxia’ Phenomenon In COVID-19 Patients
Source: COVID-19 Hypoxia Jul 03, 2020 4 years, 5 months, 2 weeks, 6 days, 14 hours, 5 minutes ago
COVID-19 Hypoxia: Researchers from Hines Veterans Affairs Hospital and Loyola University of Chicago in a new study provides possible explanations for COVID-19 patients who present with extremely low, otherwise life-threatening levels of oxygen, but no signs of dyspnea (difficulty breathing). This new understanding of the condition, known as silent hypoxemia or 'happy hypoxia,' could prevent unnecessary intubation and ventilation in patients during the current and expected second wave of coronavirus.
This phenomenon "is especially bewildering to physicians as it defies basic biology," said Dr Martin J. Tobin, MD, Loyola Medicine and Edward J. Hines Jr. VA Hospital pulmonologist and critical care specialist, and professor, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine. Dr Tobin is lead author of the study, "Why COVID-19 Silent Hypoxemia is Baffling to Physicians," appearing recently in the online
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1164/rccm.202006-2157CP
Dr Tobin told Thailand Medical news, "In some instances, the patient is comfortable and using a phone at a point when the physician is about to insert a breathing (endotracheal) tube and connect the patient to a mechanical ventilator, which, while potentially lifesaving, carries its own set of risks."
The research included 16 COVID-19 patients with very low levels of oxygen (as low as 50%; normal blood oxygen saturation is between 95 and 100%), without shortness of breath or dyspnea, and found that "several pathophysiological mechanisms account for most, if not all, cases of silent hypoxemia. This includes the initial assessment of a patient's oxygen level with a pulse oximeter.
Dr Tobin added, "While a pulse oximeter is remarkably accurate when oxygen readings are high, it markedly exaggerates the severity of low levels of oxygen when readings are low. Another factor is how the brain responds to low levels of oxygen. As oxygen levels drop in patients with COVID-19, the brain does not respond until oxygen falls to very low levels at which point a patient typically becomes short of breath.”
Also more than half of the patients had low levels of carbon dioxide, which may diminish the impact of an extremely low oxygen level.
Dr Tobin further added, "It is also possible that the coronavirus is exerting a peculiar action on how the body senses low levels of oxygen, which could be linked to the lack of smell, experienced by two-thirds of COVID-19 patients.”
Even though acknowledging that further research is needed, the study concludes that "features about COVID-19 that physicians find baffling become less strange when viewed in the light of long-established principles of respiratory physiology."
Dr Tobin added, "This new information may help to avoid unnecessary endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, which presents risks, when the ongoing and much anticipated second wave of COVID-19 emerges."
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