Long COVID-19 is characterized by ongoing symptoms or prolonged or long-term complications of SARS-CoV-2 contraction which persist beyond 4 weeks from the initial onset of symptoms. Gender and duration of hospitalization (DH) are key risk factors for developing long COVID-19 syndrome, but their impact and interplay need further study. This research involved 996 long COVID-19 patients, and we compared the levels of general psychopathology, depression, agitated depression, anxiety, and medication use between hospitalized and non-hospitalized males and females. In the hospitalized patients, multivariate regressions assessed the impact of gender, DH, and the interaction of these variables. The females had higher levels of long COVID-19 symptoms, psychotropic drug use, depression, anxiety, and general psychopathology than the males. The non-hospitalized females exhibited more severe agitated depression than the non-hospitalized males. In females, DH was more strongly correlated with the number of psychotropic medications used during long COVID-19. A negative correlation was found between DH and severity of agitated depression in the female patients only. These results highlight that the gender-specific relationship between DH and agitated depression severity should be explored further.

Simonetti, A., Restaino, A., Calderoni, C., De Chiara, E., D'Onofrio, A. M., Lioniello, S., Camardese, G., Janiri, D., Tosato, M., Landi, F., Sani, G., The Interplay between Gender and Duration of Hospitalization Modulates Psychiatric Symptom Severity in Subjects with Long COVID-19, <<BRAIN SCIENCES>>, 2025; 14 (8): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3390/brainsci14080744] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/324862]

The Interplay between Gender and Duration of Hospitalization Modulates Psychiatric Symptom Severity in Subjects with Long COVID-19

Simonetti, Alessio;Restaino, Antonio;Calderoni, Claudia;De Chiara, Emanuela;D'Onofrio, Antonio Maria;Camardese, Giovanni;Janiri, Delfina;Tosato, Matteo;Landi, Francesco;Sani, Gabriele
2024

Abstract

Long COVID-19 is characterized by ongoing symptoms or prolonged or long-term complications of SARS-CoV-2 contraction which persist beyond 4 weeks from the initial onset of symptoms. Gender and duration of hospitalization (DH) are key risk factors for developing long COVID-19 syndrome, but their impact and interplay need further study. This research involved 996 long COVID-19 patients, and we compared the levels of general psychopathology, depression, agitated depression, anxiety, and medication use between hospitalized and non-hospitalized males and females. In the hospitalized patients, multivariate regressions assessed the impact of gender, DH, and the interaction of these variables. The females had higher levels of long COVID-19 symptoms, psychotropic drug use, depression, anxiety, and general psychopathology than the males. The non-hospitalized females exhibited more severe agitated depression than the non-hospitalized males. In females, DH was more strongly correlated with the number of psychotropic medications used during long COVID-19. A negative correlation was found between DH and severity of agitated depression in the female patients only. These results highlight that the gender-specific relationship between DH and agitated depression severity should be explored further.
2024
Inglese
Simonetti, A., Restaino, A., Calderoni, C., De Chiara, E., D'Onofrio, A. M., Lioniello, S., Camardese, G., Janiri, D., Tosato, M., Landi, F., Sani, G., The Interplay between Gender and Duration of Hospitalization Modulates Psychiatric Symptom Severity in Subjects with Long COVID-19, <<BRAIN SCIENCES>>, 2025; 14 (8): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3390/brainsci14080744] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/324862]
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