Patient: Male, 84-year-old
Final Diagnosis: Acute bronchitis • chronic multiple pain with spondylosis with radiculopathy: lumbar region • chronic renal failure CKD 4 • derailed type 2 diabetes mellitus • diabetes mellitus type 2 • eart failure • hyperuricaemia • progressive aortic stenosis • pulmonary hypertension • SARS-CoV2
Symptoms: Appetite loss • fever • pain • sore throat
Medication: —
Clinical Procedure: —
Specialty: General and Internal Medicine
Objective:
Unusual clinical course
Background:
When treating patients with comorbidities who are infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome as a result of SARS-CoV-2, it is crucial to offer multidisciplinary treatment that takes into consideration all of the health conditions with which they have been diagnosed. In particular, clinicians should not lose sight of the patient experience, which we can be assessed with the help of patient-reported outcomes (PROs).
Case Report:
An 84-year-old man infected with SARS-CoV-2 was already suffering from multiple health conditions, including Type 2 diabetes mellitus. He most likely was receiving cortisone therapy and had chronic pain with spondylosis with radiculopathy, bilateral gonarthrosis following total knee replacement, malaise, and fatigue.
The patient received acute inpatient care in a hospital that provides complementary medical therapies. We collected clinical and patient-reported data on quality of life, physical functions, the sensation of pain, psychological well-being, and symptoms while taking into account the degree of chronicity of the conditions, the level of the patient’s pain, and his hospitalization in an isolation ward. We stabilized clinical parameters related to the patient’s main underlying health conditions (blood glucose and pain levels and oxygen saturation). The PROs we collected demonstrated a significant improvement on discharge.
Conclusions:
Applying PROs can be helpful in obtaining a more comprehensive picture of a patient with COVID-19, in which “the patient is given a voice,” in addition to being assessed by others. The knowledge gained can then be made available to the interdisciplinary treatment team to be incorporated into the treatment plan.