Respiratory recovery trajectories after severe-to-critical COVID-19: a 1-year prospective multicentre study. Frédéric Schlemmer , Simon Valentin , Laurent Boyer , Anne Guillaumot , François Chabot , Clairelyne Dupin , Pierre Le Guen , Gwenael Lorillon , Anne Bergeron , Damien Basille , Julia Delomez , Claire Andrejak , Valentine Bonnefoy , Hélène Goussault , Jean-Baptiste Assié , Pascaline Choinier , Anne-Marie Ruppert , Jacques Cadranel , Maria Chiara Mennitti , Mehdi Roumila , Charlotte Colin , Sven Günther , Olivier Sanchez , Thomas Gille , Lucile Sésé , Yurdagul Uzunhan , Morgane Faure , Maxime Patout , Capucine Morelot-Panzini , Pierantonio Laveneziana , Maeva Zysman , Elodie Blanchard , Chantal Raherison-Semjen , Violaine Giraud , Etienne Giroux-Leprieur , Stéfanie Habib , Nicolas Roche , Anh Tuan Dinh-Xuan , Islem Sifaoui , Pierre-Yves Brillet , Camille Jung , Emmanuelle Boutin , Richard Layese , Florence Canoui-Poitrine , Bernard Maitre The European respiratory journal(2023)
摘要
Although pulmonary function and radiological abnormalities improved up to 1 year post-acute COVID-19, high percentages of severe-to-critical disease survivors, including a notable proportion of those managed with standard oxygen, had significant lung sequelae and residual symptoms justifying prolonged follow-up.
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respiratory recovery trajectories, severe-to-critical
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