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The long-term health consequences of COVID-19 have refocused our attention on post–acute infection syndromes (PAIS), starting a discussion on the need for a complete understanding of multisystemic pathophysiology, clinical indicators, and the epidemiology of these syndromes, representing a significant blind spot in the field of medicine. A better understanding of these persistent symptom profiles, not only for post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), better known as long COVID, but also for other diseases with unexplainable post-acute sequelae, would allow doctors to fine tune the diagnostic criteria. Having a clear definition and better understanding of post–acute infection symptoms is a necessary step toward developing an evidence-based, multidisciplinary management approach.

PAIS, PASC, or long COVID

The observation of unexplained chronic sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 is known as PASC or long COVID.

Long COVID has been reported as a syndrome in survivors of serious and critical disease, but the effects also persist over time for subjects who experienced a mild infection that did not require admission to hospital. This means that PASC, especially when occurring after a mild or moderate COVID-19 infection, shares many of the same characteristics as chronic diseases triggered by other pathogenic organisms, many of which have not been sufficiently clarified.

PAIS are characterized by a set of core symptoms centering on the following:

  • Exertion intolerance
  • Disproportionate levels of fatigue
  • Neurocognitive and sensory impairment
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Unrefreshing sleep
  • Myalgia/arthralgia

A plethora of nonspecific symptoms are often present to various degrees.

These similarities suggest a unifying pathophysiology that needs to be elucidated to properly understand and manage postinfectious chronic disability.
 

Overview of PAIS

A detailed revision on what is currently known about PAIS was published in Nature Medicine. It provided various useful pieces of information to assist with the poor recognition of these conditions in clinical practice, a result of which is that patients might experience delayed or a complete lack of clinical care.

The following consolidated postinfection sequelae are mentioned:

  • Q fever fatigue syndrome, which follows infection by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii
  • Post-dengue fatigue syndrome, which can follow infection by the mosquito-borne dengue virus
  • Fatiguing and rheumatic symptoms in a subset of individuals infected with chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne virus that causes fever and joint pain in the acute phase
  • Post-polio syndrome, which can emerge as many as 15-40 years after an initial poliomyelitis attack (similarly, some other neurotropic microbes, such as West Nile virus, might lead to persistent effects)
  • Prolonged, debilitating, chronic symptoms have long been reported in a subset of patients after common and typically nonserious infections. For example, after mononucleosis, a condition generally caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and after an outbreak of Giardia lamblia, an intestinal parasite that usually causes acute intestinal illness. In fact, several studies identified the association of this outbreak of giardiasis with chronic fatigue, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and fibromyalgia persisting for many years.
  • Views expressed in the literature regarding the frequency and the validity of posttreatment Lyme disease syndrome are divided. Although substantial evidence points to persistence of arthralgia, fatigue, and subjective neurocognitive impairments in a minority of patients with Lyme disease after the recommended antibiotic treatment, some of the early studies have failed to characterize the initial Lyme disease episode with sufficient rigor.
 

 

Symptoms and signs

The symptoms and signs which, based on the evidence available, are seen more frequently in health care checks may be characterized as the following:

  • Exertion intolerance, fatigue
  • Flu-like and ‘sickness behavior’ symptoms: fever, feverishness, muscle pain, feeling sick, malaise, sweating, irritability
  • Neurological/neurocognitive symptoms: brain fog, impaired concentration or memory, trouble finding words
  • Rheumatologic symptoms: chronic or recurrent joint pain
  • Trigger-specific symptoms: for example, eye problems post Ebola, IBS post Giardia, anosmia and ageusia post COVID-19, motor disturbances post polio and post West Nile virus

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome

Patients with this disorder experience worsening of symptoms following physical, cognitive, or emotional exertion above their (very low) tolerated limit. Other prominent features frequently observed in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) are neurocognitive impairments (colloquially referred to as brain fog), unrefreshing sleep, pain, sensory disturbances, gastrointestinal issues, and various forms of dysautonomia. Up to 75% of ME/CFS cases report an infection-like episode preceding the onset of their illness. Postinfectious and postviral fatigue syndromes were originally postulated as subsets of chronic fatigue syndrome. However, there appears to be no clear consensus at present about whether these terms should be considered synonymous to the ME/CFS label or any of its subsets, or include a wider range of postinfectious fatigue conditions.

Practical diagnostic criteria

From a revision of the available criteria, it emerges that the diagnostic criteria for a PAIS should include not only the presence of symptoms, but ideally also the intensity, course, and constellation of symptoms within an individual, as the individual symptoms and symptom trajectories of PAIS vary over time, rendering a mere comparison of symptom presence at a single time point misleading. Furthermore, when a diagnosis of ME/CFS is made, attention should be given to the choice of diagnostic criteria, with preference given to the more conservative criteria, so as not to run the risk of overestimating the syndrome.

Asthenia is the cornerstone symptom for most epidemiological studies on PAIS, but it would be reductive to concentrate only on this rather than the other characteristics, such as the exacerbation of symptoms following exertion, together with other characteristic symptoms and signs that may allow for better identification of the overall, observable clinical picture in these postinfection syndromes, which have significant impacts on a patient’s quality of life.

This article was translated from Univadis Italy. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The long-term health consequences of COVID-19 have refocused our attention on post–acute infection syndromes (PAIS), starting a discussion on the need for a complete understanding of multisystemic pathophysiology, clinical indicators, and the epidemiology of these syndromes, representing a significant blind spot in the field of medicine. A better understanding of these persistent symptom profiles, not only for post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), better known as long COVID, but also for other diseases with unexplainable post-acute sequelae, would allow doctors to fine tune the diagnostic criteria. Having a clear definition and better understanding of post–acute infection symptoms is a necessary step toward developing an evidence-based, multidisciplinary management approach.

PAIS, PASC, or long COVID

The observation of unexplained chronic sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 is known as PASC or long COVID.

Long COVID has been reported as a syndrome in survivors of serious and critical disease, but the effects also persist over time for subjects who experienced a mild infection that did not require admission to hospital. This means that PASC, especially when occurring after a mild or moderate COVID-19 infection, shares many of the same characteristics as chronic diseases triggered by other pathogenic organisms, many of which have not been sufficiently clarified.

PAIS are characterized by a set of core symptoms centering on the following:

  • Exertion intolerance
  • Disproportionate levels of fatigue
  • Neurocognitive and sensory impairment
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Unrefreshing sleep
  • Myalgia/arthralgia

A plethora of nonspecific symptoms are often present to various degrees.

These similarities suggest a unifying pathophysiology that needs to be elucidated to properly understand and manage postinfectious chronic disability.
 

Overview of PAIS

A detailed revision on what is currently known about PAIS was published in Nature Medicine. It provided various useful pieces of information to assist with the poor recognition of these conditions in clinical practice, a result of which is that patients might experience delayed or a complete lack of clinical care.

The following consolidated postinfection sequelae are mentioned:

  • Q fever fatigue syndrome, which follows infection by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii
  • Post-dengue fatigue syndrome, which can follow infection by the mosquito-borne dengue virus
  • Fatiguing and rheumatic symptoms in a subset of individuals infected with chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne virus that causes fever and joint pain in the acute phase
  • Post-polio syndrome, which can emerge as many as 15-40 years after an initial poliomyelitis attack (similarly, some other neurotropic microbes, such as West Nile virus, might lead to persistent effects)
  • Prolonged, debilitating, chronic symptoms have long been reported in a subset of patients after common and typically nonserious infections. For example, after mononucleosis, a condition generally caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and after an outbreak of Giardia lamblia, an intestinal parasite that usually causes acute intestinal illness. In fact, several studies identified the association of this outbreak of giardiasis with chronic fatigue, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and fibromyalgia persisting for many years.
  • Views expressed in the literature regarding the frequency and the validity of posttreatment Lyme disease syndrome are divided. Although substantial evidence points to persistence of arthralgia, fatigue, and subjective neurocognitive impairments in a minority of patients with Lyme disease after the recommended antibiotic treatment, some of the early studies have failed to characterize the initial Lyme disease episode with sufficient rigor.
 

 

Symptoms and signs

The symptoms and signs which, based on the evidence available, are seen more frequently in health care checks may be characterized as the following:

  • Exertion intolerance, fatigue
  • Flu-like and ‘sickness behavior’ symptoms: fever, feverishness, muscle pain, feeling sick, malaise, sweating, irritability
  • Neurological/neurocognitive symptoms: brain fog, impaired concentration or memory, trouble finding words
  • Rheumatologic symptoms: chronic or recurrent joint pain
  • Trigger-specific symptoms: for example, eye problems post Ebola, IBS post Giardia, anosmia and ageusia post COVID-19, motor disturbances post polio and post West Nile virus

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome

Patients with this disorder experience worsening of symptoms following physical, cognitive, or emotional exertion above their (very low) tolerated limit. Other prominent features frequently observed in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) are neurocognitive impairments (colloquially referred to as brain fog), unrefreshing sleep, pain, sensory disturbances, gastrointestinal issues, and various forms of dysautonomia. Up to 75% of ME/CFS cases report an infection-like episode preceding the onset of their illness. Postinfectious and postviral fatigue syndromes were originally postulated as subsets of chronic fatigue syndrome. However, there appears to be no clear consensus at present about whether these terms should be considered synonymous to the ME/CFS label or any of its subsets, or include a wider range of postinfectious fatigue conditions.

Practical diagnostic criteria

From a revision of the available criteria, it emerges that the diagnostic criteria for a PAIS should include not only the presence of symptoms, but ideally also the intensity, course, and constellation of symptoms within an individual, as the individual symptoms and symptom trajectories of PAIS vary over time, rendering a mere comparison of symptom presence at a single time point misleading. Furthermore, when a diagnosis of ME/CFS is made, attention should be given to the choice of diagnostic criteria, with preference given to the more conservative criteria, so as not to run the risk of overestimating the syndrome.

Asthenia is the cornerstone symptom for most epidemiological studies on PAIS, but it would be reductive to concentrate only on this rather than the other characteristics, such as the exacerbation of symptoms following exertion, together with other characteristic symptoms and signs that may allow for better identification of the overall, observable clinical picture in these postinfection syndromes, which have significant impacts on a patient’s quality of life.

This article was translated from Univadis Italy. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The long-term health consequences of COVID-19 have refocused our attention on post–acute infection syndromes (PAIS), starting a discussion on the need for a complete understanding of multisystemic pathophysiology, clinical indicators, and the epidemiology of these syndromes, representing a significant blind spot in the field of medicine. A better understanding of these persistent symptom profiles, not only for post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), better known as long COVID, but also for other diseases with unexplainable post-acute sequelae, would allow doctors to fine tune the diagnostic criteria. Having a clear definition and better understanding of post–acute infection symptoms is a necessary step toward developing an evidence-based, multidisciplinary management approach.

PAIS, PASC, or long COVID

The observation of unexplained chronic sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 is known as PASC or long COVID.

Long COVID has been reported as a syndrome in survivors of serious and critical disease, but the effects also persist over time for subjects who experienced a mild infection that did not require admission to hospital. This means that PASC, especially when occurring after a mild or moderate COVID-19 infection, shares many of the same characteristics as chronic diseases triggered by other pathogenic organisms, many of which have not been sufficiently clarified.

PAIS are characterized by a set of core symptoms centering on the following:

  • Exertion intolerance
  • Disproportionate levels of fatigue
  • Neurocognitive and sensory impairment
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Unrefreshing sleep
  • Myalgia/arthralgia

A plethora of nonspecific symptoms are often present to various degrees.

These similarities suggest a unifying pathophysiology that needs to be elucidated to properly understand and manage postinfectious chronic disability.
 

Overview of PAIS

A detailed revision on what is currently known about PAIS was published in Nature Medicine. It provided various useful pieces of information to assist with the poor recognition of these conditions in clinical practice, a result of which is that patients might experience delayed or a complete lack of clinical care.

The following consolidated postinfection sequelae are mentioned:

  • Q fever fatigue syndrome, which follows infection by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii
  • Post-dengue fatigue syndrome, which can follow infection by the mosquito-borne dengue virus
  • Fatiguing and rheumatic symptoms in a subset of individuals infected with chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne virus that causes fever and joint pain in the acute phase
  • Post-polio syndrome, which can emerge as many as 15-40 years after an initial poliomyelitis attack (similarly, some other neurotropic microbes, such as West Nile virus, might lead to persistent effects)
  • Prolonged, debilitating, chronic symptoms have long been reported in a subset of patients after common and typically nonserious infections. For example, after mononucleosis, a condition generally caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and after an outbreak of Giardia lamblia, an intestinal parasite that usually causes acute intestinal illness. In fact, several studies identified the association of this outbreak of giardiasis with chronic fatigue, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and fibromyalgia persisting for many years.
  • Views expressed in the literature regarding the frequency and the validity of posttreatment Lyme disease syndrome are divided. Although substantial evidence points to persistence of arthralgia, fatigue, and subjective neurocognitive impairments in a minority of patients with Lyme disease after the recommended antibiotic treatment, some of the early studies have failed to characterize the initial Lyme disease episode with sufficient rigor.
 

 

Symptoms and signs

The symptoms and signs which, based on the evidence available, are seen more frequently in health care checks may be characterized as the following:

  • Exertion intolerance, fatigue
  • Flu-like and ‘sickness behavior’ symptoms: fever, feverishness, muscle pain, feeling sick, malaise, sweating, irritability
  • Neurological/neurocognitive symptoms: brain fog, impaired concentration or memory, trouble finding words
  • Rheumatologic symptoms: chronic or recurrent joint pain
  • Trigger-specific symptoms: for example, eye problems post Ebola, IBS post Giardia, anosmia and ageusia post COVID-19, motor disturbances post polio and post West Nile virus

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome

Patients with this disorder experience worsening of symptoms following physical, cognitive, or emotional exertion above their (very low) tolerated limit. Other prominent features frequently observed in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) are neurocognitive impairments (colloquially referred to as brain fog), unrefreshing sleep, pain, sensory disturbances, gastrointestinal issues, and various forms of dysautonomia. Up to 75% of ME/CFS cases report an infection-like episode preceding the onset of their illness. Postinfectious and postviral fatigue syndromes were originally postulated as subsets of chronic fatigue syndrome. However, there appears to be no clear consensus at present about whether these terms should be considered synonymous to the ME/CFS label or any of its subsets, or include a wider range of postinfectious fatigue conditions.

Practical diagnostic criteria

From a revision of the available criteria, it emerges that the diagnostic criteria for a PAIS should include not only the presence of symptoms, but ideally also the intensity, course, and constellation of symptoms within an individual, as the individual symptoms and symptom trajectories of PAIS vary over time, rendering a mere comparison of symptom presence at a single time point misleading. Furthermore, when a diagnosis of ME/CFS is made, attention should be given to the choice of diagnostic criteria, with preference given to the more conservative criteria, so as not to run the risk of overestimating the syndrome.

Asthenia is the cornerstone symptom for most epidemiological studies on PAIS, but it would be reductive to concentrate only on this rather than the other characteristics, such as the exacerbation of symptoms following exertion, together with other characteristic symptoms and signs that may allow for better identification of the overall, observable clinical picture in these postinfection syndromes, which have significant impacts on a patient’s quality of life.

This article was translated from Univadis Italy. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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