Title of article :
Late Complications of COVID-19; a Systematic Review of Current Evidence
Author/Authors :
SeyedAlinaghi, Ahmad Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS - Iranian Institute for Reduction of High Risk Behaviors - Tehran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran - Iran , Afsahi, Amir Masoud Department of Radiology - School of Medicine - University of California - San Diego (UCSD) - California - USA , MohsseniPour, Mehrzad Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS - Iranian Institute for Reduction of High Risk Behaviors - Tehran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran - Iran , Behnezhad, Farzane Department of Virology - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran - Iran , Salehi, Mohammad Amin Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS - Iranian Institute for Reduction of High Risk Behaviors - Tehran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran - Iran , Barzegary, Alireza School of medicine - Islamic Azad University - Tehran - Iran , Mirzapour, Pegah Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS - Iranian Institute for Reduction of High Risk Behaviors - Tehran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran - Iran , Mehraeen, Esmaeil Department of Health Information Technology - Khalkhal University of Medical Sciences - Khalkhal - Iran , Dadras, Omid Department of Global Health and Socioepidemiology - Graduate School of Medicine - Kyoto University - Kyoto - Japan
Abstract :
Introduction: COVID-19 is a new rapidly spreading epidemic. The symptoms of this disease could be diverse
as the virus can affect any organ in the body of an infected person. This study aimed to investigate the available
evidence for long-term complications of COVID-19. Methods: This study was a systematic review of current
evidence conducted in November 2020 to investigate probable late and long-term complications of COVID-19.
We performed a systematic search, using the keywords, in online databases including PubMed, Scopus, Science
Direct, Up to Date, and Web of Science, to find papers published from December 2019 to October 2020. Peerreviewed original papers published in English, which met the eligibility criteria were included in the final report.
Addressing non-human studies, unavailability of the full-text document, and duplicated results in databases,
were characteristics that led to exclusion of the papers from review. Results: The full-texts of 65 articles have
been reviewed. We identified 10 potential late complications of COVID-19. A review of studies showed that
lung injuries (n=31), venous/arterial thrombosis (n=28), heart injuries (n=26), cardiac/brain stroke (n=23), and
neurological injuries (n=20) are the most frequent late complications of COVID-19. Conclusion: Since we are
still at the early stages of the COVID-19 epidemic, it is too soon to predict what long-term complications are
likely to appear in the survivors of the disease in years after recovery. Furthermore, the complexity of COVID-19
behaviors and targets in the human body creates uncertainty in anticipating long-term complications.
Keywords:
Keywords :
Long Term Adverse Effects , Late Onset Disorders , COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , post-acute COVID-19 syndrome
Journal title :
Archives of Academic Emergency Medicine (AAEM)