Adjunct low level laser therapy (LLLT) in a morbidly obese patient with severe COVID-19 pneumonia: A case report.

0 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy Pub Date : 2020-09-28 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.29390/cjrt-2020-022
Scott A Sigman, Soheila Mokmeli, Mariana A Vetrici
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Introduction: COVID-19 poses a higher risk of complications in obese patients due to low respiratory system compliance, increased inflammatory cytokines, and an activated immune system secondary to excess adiposity. Low level laser therapy (LLLT) has significant anti-inflammatory effects and reduces inflammatory cytokines. It is noninvasive and approved for pain management and musculoskeletal injuries. Data from human and experimental animal models of respiratory tract disease suggests that LLLT reduces inflammation and promotes lung healing.

Case and outcomes: A morbidly obese 32-year-old Asian female with severe COVID-19 received four consecutive once-daily LLLT sessions via a laser scanner. Pulsed 808 nm and 905 nm laser beams were delivered over the posterior chest for 28 min. The patient was evaluated before and after LLLT by radiological assessment of lung edema (RALE) on chest X-ray, oxygen requirements and saturation, pneumonia severity indices (SMART-COP and Brescia-COVID), blood inflammatory markers (interleukin-6, ferritin, and C-Reactive protein (CRP)). Prior to treatment, oxygen saturation (SpO2) via pulse oximetry was 88%-93% on 5-6 L oxygen. Following LLLT, SpO2 increased to 97%-99% on 1-3 L oxygen. Reductions in RALE score from 8 to 3, Brescia-COVID from 4 to 0, and SMART-COP from 5 to 0 were observed. Interleukin-6 decreased from 45.89 to 11.7 pg/mL, ferritin from 359 to 175 ng/mL, and CRP from 3.04 to 1.43 mg/dL. Post-treatment, the patient noted appreciable improvement in respiratory symptoms.

Conclusion: Following LLLT our patient showed improvement over a few days in respiratory indices, radiological findings, inflammatory markers, and patient outcomes. This report suggests that adjunct LLLT can be safely combined with conventional treatment in patients with severe COVID-19 and morbid obesity.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

辅助低水平激光治疗1例病态肥胖合并重症COVID-19肺炎患者
由于呼吸系统顺应性低、炎症细胞因子增加和过度肥胖继发的免疫系统激活,COVID-19在肥胖患者中引起并发症的风险更高。低水平激光治疗(LLLT)具有显著的抗炎作用和减少炎症细胞因子。它是非侵入性的,被批准用于疼痛管理和肌肉骨骼损伤。来自呼吸道疾病的人类和实验动物模型的数据表明,LLLT可以减轻炎症并促进肺愈合。病例和结果:一名患有严重COVID-19的32岁病态肥胖亚洲女性通过激光扫描仪连续四次接受每日一次的LLLT治疗。808 nm和905 nm脉冲激光束经后胸照射28分钟。通过胸部x线肺水肿(RALE)、氧需氧量和饱和度、肺炎严重程度指标(SMART-COP和Brescia-COVID)、血液炎症标志物(白细胞介素-6、铁蛋白和c反应蛋白(CRP))评估患者LLLT前后的放射学评估。治疗前,脉搏血氧饱和度(SpO2)在5-6 L氧条件下为88%-93%。LLLT后,在1 ~ 3l氧条件下,SpO2增加到97% ~ 99%。RALE评分从8分降至3分,布雷西亚- covid从4分降至0分,SMART-COP从5分降至0分。白细胞介素-6从45.89降至11.7 pg/mL,铁蛋白从359降至175 ng/mL, CRP从3.04降至1.43 mg/dL。治疗后,患者呼吸道症状明显改善。结论:在LLLT治疗后,我们的患者在几天内呼吸指标、影像学表现、炎症标志物和患者预后均有所改善。该报告表明,在重症COVID-19和病态肥胖患者中,辅助LLLT可以安全地与常规治疗相结合。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy Health Professions-Health Professions (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: The CJRT is published four times a year and represents the interests of respiratory therapists nationally and internationally. The CJRT has been redesigned to act as an educational dissemination tool. The CJRT encourages submission of original articles, papers, commentaries, case studies, literature reviews and directed reading papers. Submissions can be sent to Rita Hansen.
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