Back to Search Start Over

Dehydration is associated with production of organic osmolytes and predicts physical long-term symptoms after COVID-19: a multicenter cohort study

Authors :
Michael Hultström
Miklos Lipcsey
Dave R. Morrison
Tomoko Nakanishi
Guillaume Butler-Laporte
Yiheng Chen
Satoshi Yoshiji
Vincenzo Forgetta
Yossi Farjoun
Ewa Wallin
Ing-Marie Larsson
Anders Larsson
Adriana Marton
Jens Marc Titze
Sandra Nihlén
J. Brent Richards
Robert Frithiof
Source :
Critical Care, Vol 26, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background We have previously shown that iatrogenic dehydration is associated with a shift to organic osmolyte production in the general ICU population. The aim of the present investigation was to determine the validity of the physiological response to dehydration known as aestivation and its relevance for long-term disease outcome in COVID-19. Methods The study includes 374 COVID-19 patients from the Pronmed cohort admitted to the ICU at Uppsala University Hospital. Dehydration data was available for 165 of these patients and used for the primary analysis. Validation was performed in Biobanque Québécoise de la COVID-19 (BQC19) using 1052 patients with dehydration data. Dehydration was assessed through estimated osmolality (eOSM = 2Na + 2 K + glucose + urea), and correlated to important endpoints including death, invasive mechanical ventilation, acute kidney injury, and long COVID-19 symptom score grouped by physical or mental. Results Increasing eOSM was correlated with increasing role of organic osmolytes for eOSM, while the proportion of sodium and potassium of eOSM were inversely correlated to eOSM. Acute outcomes were associated with pronounced dehydration, and physical long-COVID was more strongly associated with dehydration than mental long-COVID after adjustment for age, sex, and disease severity. Metabolomic analysis showed enrichment of amino acids among metabolites that showed an aestivating pattern. Conclusions Dehydration during acute COVID-19 infection causes an aestivation response that is associated with protein degradation and physical long-COVID. Trial registration: The study was registered à priori (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04316884 registered on 2020-03-13 and NCT04474249 registered on 2020-06-29). Graphical abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13648535 and 57254478
Volume :
26
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Critical Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.224050cb57254478b7dc8869859a55c2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-022-04203-w