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This study aims to identify if breathless patients with Long COVID have reduced transfer factor on pulmonary function testing and if the degree of transfer factor reduction is correlated with the symptom severity and physiological ability to exercise. We will also investigate whether a new type of X-ray called a dynamic chest X-ray can identify perfusion abnormalities and whether these correlate with differences in diffusion capacity measured on a pulmonary function test.
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Long COVID is the term used to describe patients who present with persistent symptoms after recovering from SARS-CoV-2 infection. Patients exhibit a range of symptoms and commonly report respiratory and cardiac phenomena including breathlessness, feeling tight chested and having persistent tachycardias. Survey data suggests up to 87% of patients discharged from hospital after COVID-19 infection have ongoing symptoms 60 days after discharge, with 43% describing breathlessness. In the USA, 35% of patients treated for SARS-CoV-2 as an outpatient have ongoing symptoms, with a similar percentage of the population unable to return to their normal work. The natural history and pathophysiology of long COVID is not yet fully understood. Few studies have explored pulmonary function in post-COVID patients. There are suggestions that functional limitation is related to lung abnormalities affecting both ventilation (air flow) and perfusion (blood flow), possibly caused by micro-blood clots. Establishing a relatively cost-effective and accessible way of diagnosing these will allow clinicians to treat or signpost the patients to the correct services. This is vital at both the patient and health system level.
Full pulmonary function testing is routinely done in respiratory clinics to investigate breathlessness and diagnose conditions such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and pulmonary fibrosis. It includes a measure of transfer factor, an estimate of the efficiency of the diffusion of gas from the lung into the blood stream. The lungs' ability to absorb carbon monoxide (CO) is measured as a proxy for the ability to absorb oxygen. It is hypothesised that long COVID patients with breathlessness have abnormal gas transfer due to lung tissue damage at an alveolar level and/or perfusion abnormalities such as micro clots. Dynamic X-ray is a new, innovative technology to image the thoracic cavity throughout the breathing cycle allowing assessment of pulmonary function and possibly diagnose small ventilation-perfusion abnormities. Liverpool hosts the only dynamic X-ray machine in Europe. Potential applications beyond COVID are numerous, including filling diagnostic gaps in many lung diseases where expensive lung function testing is an unrealistic possibility in the medium term.
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194 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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