Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong

Background: Heterogeneous clinical conditions were observed in individuals who had recovered from COVID-19 and some symptoms were found to persist for an extended period post-COVID. Given the non-specific nature of the symptoms, Chinese medicine (CM) is advantageous in providing holistic medical ass...

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Main Authors: Zhong, Linda, Tian, Liang, Ng, Chester Yan Jie, Leung, Choryin, Yang, Xian, Liong, Ching, Chen, Haiyong, Wong, Rowena, Ng, Bacon F. L., Lin, Zhixiu, Feng, Yibin, Bian, Zhaoxiang
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
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Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171008
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1710082023-10-16T15:32:45Z Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong Zhong, Linda Tian, Liang Ng, Chester Yan Jie Leung, Choryin Yang, Xian Liong, Ching Chen, Haiyong Wong, Rowena Ng, Bacon F. L. Lin, Zhixiu Feng, Yibin Bian, Zhaoxiang School of Biological Sciences Science::Biological sciences COVID-19 Chinese Medicine Syndromes Background: Heterogeneous clinical conditions were observed in individuals who had recovered from COVID-19 and some symptoms were found to persist for an extended period post-COVID. Given the non-specific nature of the symptoms, Chinese medicine (CM) is advantageous in providing holistic medical assessment for individuals experiencing persisting problems. Chinese medicine is a type of treatment that involves prescribing regimens based on CM Syndromes diagnosed by CM practitioners. However, inadequate research on CM elements behind the practice has faced scrutiny. Methods: This study analysed 1058 CM medical records from 150 post-COVID-19 individuals via a semi-text-mining approach. A logistic model with MCMCglmm was then utilised to analyse the associations between the indicated factors and identified conditions. Calculations were performed using R Studio and related libraries. Results: With the semi-text-mining approach, three common CM Syndromes (Qi and Yin Deficiency, Lung and Spleen Deficiency, Qi Deficiency of both Spleen and Lung) and nine clinical conditions (fatigue, poor sleep, dry mouth, shortness of breath, cough, headache, tiredness, sweating, coughing phlegm) were identified in the CM clinical records. Analysis via MCMCglmm revealed that the occurrence of persisting clinical conditions was significantly associated with female gender, existing chronic conditions (hypertension, high cholesterol, and diabetes mellitus), and the three persisting CM Syndromes. The current study triangulated the findings from our previous observational study, further showing that patients with certain post-COVID CM Syndromes had significantly increased log-odds of having persisting clinical conditions. Furthermore, this study elucidated that the presence of chronic conditions in the patients would also significantly increase the log-odds of having persistent post-COVID clinical conditions. Conclusion: This study provided insights on mining text-based CM clinical records to identify persistent post-COVID clinical conditions and the factors associated with their occurrence. Future studies could examine the integration of integrating exercise modules, such as health qigong Liuzijue, into multidisciplinary rehabilitation programmes. Published version This research is finally supported by Hong Kong Hospital Authority Research Project: Special Chinese Medicine Out-patient Programme for Discharged Covid-19 Patients – Observational Study (Ref Code: HA 105/48 PT35), Young Qi Huang Scholar Research Grant (SCM-2020-001) and Research Grants Council of Hong Kong (CRF grant no. C2005-22Y). 2023-10-10T04:46:55Z 2023-10-10T04:46:55Z 2023 Journal Article Zhong, L., Tian, L., Ng, C. Y. J., Leung, C., Yang, X., Liong, C., Chen, H., Wong, R., Ng, B. F. L., Lin, Z., Feng, Y. & Bian, Z. (2023). Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong. Heliyon, 9(9), e19410-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19410 2405-8440 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171008 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19410 37810093 2-s2.0-85169044443 9 9 e19410 en Heliyon © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
COVID-19
Chinese Medicine Syndromes
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
COVID-19
Chinese Medicine Syndromes
Zhong, Linda
Tian, Liang
Ng, Chester Yan Jie
Leung, Choryin
Yang, Xian
Liong, Ching
Chen, Haiyong
Wong, Rowena
Ng, Bacon F. L.
Lin, Zhixiu
Feng, Yibin
Bian, Zhaoxiang
Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
description Background: Heterogeneous clinical conditions were observed in individuals who had recovered from COVID-19 and some symptoms were found to persist for an extended period post-COVID. Given the non-specific nature of the symptoms, Chinese medicine (CM) is advantageous in providing holistic medical assessment for individuals experiencing persisting problems. Chinese medicine is a type of treatment that involves prescribing regimens based on CM Syndromes diagnosed by CM practitioners. However, inadequate research on CM elements behind the practice has faced scrutiny. Methods: This study analysed 1058 CM medical records from 150 post-COVID-19 individuals via a semi-text-mining approach. A logistic model with MCMCglmm was then utilised to analyse the associations between the indicated factors and identified conditions. Calculations were performed using R Studio and related libraries. Results: With the semi-text-mining approach, three common CM Syndromes (Qi and Yin Deficiency, Lung and Spleen Deficiency, Qi Deficiency of both Spleen and Lung) and nine clinical conditions (fatigue, poor sleep, dry mouth, shortness of breath, cough, headache, tiredness, sweating, coughing phlegm) were identified in the CM clinical records. Analysis via MCMCglmm revealed that the occurrence of persisting clinical conditions was significantly associated with female gender, existing chronic conditions (hypertension, high cholesterol, and diabetes mellitus), and the three persisting CM Syndromes. The current study triangulated the findings from our previous observational study, further showing that patients with certain post-COVID CM Syndromes had significantly increased log-odds of having persisting clinical conditions. Furthermore, this study elucidated that the presence of chronic conditions in the patients would also significantly increase the log-odds of having persistent post-COVID clinical conditions. Conclusion: This study provided insights on mining text-based CM clinical records to identify persistent post-COVID clinical conditions and the factors associated with their occurrence. Future studies could examine the integration of integrating exercise modules, such as health qigong Liuzijue, into multidisciplinary rehabilitation programmes.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Zhong, Linda
Tian, Liang
Ng, Chester Yan Jie
Leung, Choryin
Yang, Xian
Liong, Ching
Chen, Haiyong
Wong, Rowena
Ng, Bacon F. L.
Lin, Zhixiu
Feng, Yibin
Bian, Zhaoxiang
format Article
author Zhong, Linda
Tian, Liang
Ng, Chester Yan Jie
Leung, Choryin
Yang, Xian
Liong, Ching
Chen, Haiyong
Wong, Rowena
Ng, Bacon F. L.
Lin, Zhixiu
Feng, Yibin
Bian, Zhaoxiang
author_sort Zhong, Linda
title Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
title_short Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
title_full Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
title_fullStr Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
title_full_unstemmed Persistent clinical symptoms and their association with CM syndromes in post-COVID-19 rehabilitation patients in Hong Kong
title_sort persistent clinical symptoms and their association with cm syndromes in post-covid-19 rehabilitation patients in hong kong
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171008
_version_ 1781793809021009920