1. Outcome of Different Therapeutic Interventions in Mild COVID-19 Patients in a Single OPD Clinic of West Bengal: A Retrospective study
- Author
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Kingshuk Bhattacharjee, Samajdar Ss, Sayak Roy, Shatavisa Mukherjee, and Santanu Kumar Tripathi
- Subjects
Doxycycline ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Psychological intervention ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hydroxychloroquine ,Azithromycin ,Ivermectin ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,West bengal ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
IntroductionWith over 87,273,380 cases being reported and 1,899,440 deaths worldwide as of 9th January 2021, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has become the worst-hit pandemic till date. Every day clinicians are bombarded with many new treatment options that claim to be better than the others.Materials and methodsAfter screening the electronic database of COVID-19 patients retrospectively, 56 patients with mild COVID-19 infection matched the inclusion criteria and were divided into the four following groups - group having used Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), group using doxycycline (DOX) + Ivermectin (IVR) combination, group receiving only azithromycin (AZ) and, group receiving only symptomatic treatment. The study’s primary objective was to see Clinical response of well-being (CRWB) reporting time after initiating treatment onset between the four different treatment arms.ResultsCRWB did not differ between the four groups receiving four different managements (p-value 0.846). There was significant correlation between blood levels of LDH (p-value 0.001), CRP (p-value 0.03) and D-dimer (p-value 0.04) with CRWB in IVR+DOX group and, between LDH (p-value 0.001), CRP (p-value 0.01) and age (p-value 0.035) with CRWB in the symptomatic management group.ConclusionMild COVID-19 infection in patients having low-risk to progress can be managed symptomatically without any specific drug intervention.
- Published
- 2021
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