By Richard Levitan (Dr. Levitan is an emergency doctor) Op-ed @ NYTimes.com, April 20
[....] During my recent time at Bellevue, though, almost all the E.R. patients had Covid pneumonia. Within the first hour of my first shift I inserted breathing tubes into two patients.
Even patients without respiratory complaints had Covid pneumonia. The patient stabbed in the shoulder, whom we X-rayed because we worried he had a collapsed lung, actually had Covid pneumonia. In patients on whom we did CT scans because they were injured in falls, we coincidentally found Covid pneumonia. Elderly patients who had passed out for unknown reasons and a number of diabetic patients were found to have it.
And here is what really surprised us: These patients did not report any sensation of breathing problems, even though their chest X-rays showed diffuse pneumonia and their oxygen was below normal. How could this be?
We are just beginning to recognize that Covid pneumonia initially causes a form of oxygen deprivation we call “silent hypoxia” — “silent” because of its insidious, hard-to-detect nature.
Pneumonia is an infection of the lungs in which the air sacs fill with fluid or pus. Normally, patients develop chest discomfort, pain with breathing and other breathing problems. But when Covid pneumonia first strikes, patients don’t feel short of breath, even as their oxygen levels fall. And by the time they do, they have alarmingly low oxygen levels and moderate-to-severe pneumonia (as seen on chest X-rays). Normal oxygen saturation for most persons at sea level is 94 percent to 100 percent; Covid pneumonia patients I saw had oxygen saturations as low as 50 percent.
To my amazement, most patients I saw said they had been sick for a week or so with fever, cough, upset stomach and fatigue, but they only became short of breath the day they came to the hospital. Their pneumonia had clearly been going on for days, but by the time they felt they had to go to the hospital, they were often already in critical condition.
In emergency departments we insert breathing tubes in critically ill patients for a variety of reasons. In my 30 years of practice, however, most patients requiring emergency intubation are in shock, have altered mental status or are grunting to breathe. Patients requiring intubation because of acute hypoxia are often unconscious or using every muscle they can to take a breath. They are in extreme duress. Covid pneumonia cases are very different.
A vast majority of Covid pneumonia patients I met had remarkably low oxygen saturations at triage — seemingly incompatible with life — but they were using their cellphones as we put them on monitors. Although breathing fast, they had relatively minimal apparent distress, despite dangerously low oxygen levels and terrible pneumonia on chest X-rays.
We are only just beginning to understand why this is so. The coronavirus attacks lung cells that make surfactant [....]
Arta, I just posted the article this doc wrote, but had a slightly different slant on it. If you think mine is too repetitive, I'm happy to take it down. I want everyone to read it. It is so very interesting and informative.
Somehow I truly doubt you're repetitive, and it's easy enough for people to just stop reading if they think so.
And we've dealt with a ton of repetitive around here anyway, so you'll have to wait in line anyways before we'd call you up from the minor leagues.
Comments
The Infection That’s Silently Killing Coronavirus Patients; This is what I learned during 10 days of treating Covid pneumonia at Bellevue Hospital.
By Richard Levitan (Dr. Levitan is an emergency doctor) Op-ed @ NYTimes.com, April 20
by artappraiser on Tue, 04/21/2020 - 1:28pm
Arta, I just posted the article this doc wrote, but had a slightly different slant on it. If you think mine is too repetitive, I'm happy to take it down. I want everyone to read it. It is so very interesting and informative.
by CVille Dem on Tue, 04/21/2020 - 3:07pm
no no, is great you did. I just wanted to have copy here because I want to send both links to family and friends and want to find them easy
by artappraiser on Tue, 04/21/2020 - 6:31pm
Somehow I truly doubt you're repetitive, and it's easy enough for people to just stop reading if they think so.
And we've dealt with a ton of repetitive around here anyway, so you'll have to wait in line anyways before we'd call you up from the minor leagues.
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 04/21/2020 - 6:40pm