4.5 Article

What about the others: differential diagnosis of COVID-19 in a German emergency department

Journal

BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12879-021-06663-x

Keywords

COVID-19; Differential diagnosis; Respiratory infection; Triage; Clinical symptoms; Emergency department; SARS-Cov-2

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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The COVID-19 pandemic poses a major challenge for health care systems worldwide, especially in emergency medicine. Early triage in the emergency department is crucial for proper therapy. Clinical symptoms of COVID-19 are similar to those of many common diseases, making differential diagnosis challenging. This retrospective study in Germany found that COVID-19 patients had less dyspnea but more dysgeusia compared to COVID-19 negative respiratory infections, with longer hospital stays and higher mortality rates.
Background The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic remains a major challenge for worldwide health care systems and in particular emergency medicine. An early and safe triage in the emergency department (ED) is especially crucial for proper therapy. Clinical symptoms of COVID-19 comprise those of many common diseases; thus, differential diagnosis remains challenging. Method We performed a retrospective study of 314 ED patients presenting with conceivable COVID-19 symptoms during the first wave in Germany. All were tested for COVID-19 with SARS-Cov-2-nasopharyngeal swabs. Forty-seven patients were positive. We analyzed the 267 COVID-19 negative patients for their main diagnosis and compared COVID-19 patients with COVID-19 negative respiratory infections for differences in laboratory parameters, symptoms, and vital signs. Results Among the 267 COVID-19 negative patients, 42.7% had respiratory, 14.2% had other infectious, and 11.2% had cardiovascular diseases. Further, 9.0% and 6.7% had oncological and gastroenterological diagnoses, respectively. Compared to COVID-19 negative airway infections, COVID-19 patients showed less dyspnea (OR 0.440; p = 0.024) but more dysgeusia (OR 7.631; p = 0.005). Their hospital stay was significantly longer (9.0 vs. 5.6 days; p = 0.014), and their mortality significantly higher (OR 3.979; p = 0.014). Conclusion For many common ED diagnoses, COVID-19 should be considered a differential diagnosis. COVID-19 cannot be distinguished from COVID-19 negative respiratory infections by clinical signs, symptoms, or laboratory results. When hospitalization is necessary, the clinical course of COVID-19 airway infections seems to be more severe compared to other respiratory infections. Trial registration: German Clinical Trial Registry DRKS, DRKS-ID of the study: DRKS00021675 date of registration: May 8th, 2020, retrospectively registered.

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