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Characteristics, Management And Outcomes Of Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients Admitted To ICU In Hospitals In Bangladesh: A Retrospective Study

Saha, A.; Ahsan, M. M.; Quader, T.-U.; Shohan, M. U. S.; Naher, S.; Dutta, P.; Akash, A.-S.; Mehedi, H. M. H.; Chowdhury, A. S. M. A. U.; Karim, H.; Rahman, T.; Parvin, A.

2020-09-25 intensive care and critical care medicine
10.1101/2020.09.24.20201285 medRxiv
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ObjectivesThis study aimed to analyse the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of critical COVID-19 cases and investigate risk factors including comorbidities and age in relation with the clinical aftermath of COVID-19 in critical cases in Bangladesh. MethodsIn this retrospective study, epidemiological and clinical characteristics, complications, laboratory results, and clinical management of the patients were studied from data obtained from 168 individuals diagnosed with an advanced prognosis of COVID-19 admitted in two hospitals in Bangladesh. ResultsIndividuals in the study sample contracted COVID-19 through community transmission. 56.5% (n = 95) cases died in intensive care units (ICU) during the study period. The median age was 56 years and 79.2% (n=134) were male. Typical clinical manifestation included Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) related complications (79.2%), fever (54.2%) and cough (25.6%) while diabetes mellitus (52.4%), hypertension (41.1%) and heart diseases (16.7%) were the conventional comorbidities. Clinical outcomes were detrimental due to comorbidities rather than age and comorbid individuals over 50 were at more risk. In the sample, oxygen saturation was low (< 95% SpO2) in 135 patients (80.4%) and 158 (93.4%) patients received supplemental oxygen. Identical biochemical parameters were found in both deceased and surviving cases. Administration of antiviral drug Remdesivir and the glucocorticoid, Dexamethasone increased the proportion of surviving patients slightly. ConclusionsSusceptibility to developing critical illness due to COVID-19 was found more in comorbid males. These atypical patients require more clinical attention from the prospect of controlling mortality rate in Bangladesh.

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