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COVID-19 pandemic and triggered acute myocardial infarction and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in non-infected individuals

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Background and Aims: The Covid-19 pandemic-related stressors are associated with behavioral and psychological problems, but no reports describe the pandemic stress triggering acute coronary events including acute myocardial infarction (AMI)… Click to show full abstract

Background and Aims: The Covid-19 pandemic-related stressors are associated with behavioral and psychological problems, but no reports describe the pandemic stress triggering acute coronary events including acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) among individuals not infected with the covid-19 virus. Methods: We enrolled Covid-19 negative patients with AMI or OHCA admitted to 8 centers in Jordan during the covid-19 pandemic (March 15 through December 31, 2020). All of the patients were exposed to pandemic-related psychosocial and financial stressors. Results: We enrolled 177 patients (mean age 59.6+9.9 years, 84% men). Hypertension was present in 50%, diabetes in 45%, cigarette smoking in 71%, and 36% had history of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Of the whole group, 166 (94%) had AMI and 11 (6%) had OHCA. Patients with OHCA were younger (55.0+7.1 vs. 59.9+10.7 years, p<0.05) and had lower rate of past CVD (9% vs. 37%, p<0.001) compared with AMI patients. Of the AMI patients, 147 (83%) had coronary angiography, 119 (67%) had percutaneous angioplasty and 14 (8%) had bypass surgery. Survival rate was 0 for the OHCA patients and 98.2% for AMI patients (p<0.0001). The most common reported pandemic-related triggers the patients were exposed to included financial hardships in 82 (46%), loneliness in 77 (44%), fear to contract the virus or of lack of medical care in 55 (31%), anger in 29 (16%), and heavy physical exertion in 8 patients (5%). Conclusions: The Covid-19 pandemic-related stressors can potentially trigger life threatening acute coronary events. The minority of patients who had OHCA had a grim prognosis.

Keywords: hospital cardiac; myocardial infarction; pandemic related; cardiac arrest; acute myocardial; covid pandemic

Journal Title: Atherosclerosis
Year Published: 2021

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