NCH is part of Endeavor Health
Learn moreApril 16, 2020
We know there are some pre-existing conditions that make a diagnosis of COVID-19 even more dangerous. Devin Mehta, M.D., NCH Medical Group Advanced Heart Failure Cardiologist and Director of Heart Failure at NCH, took some time to talk about one of these conditions.
Q: “Heart patient” is a general term used to refer to someone who has a pacemaker or someone with a transplant. Can you tell us what that means?
Dr. Mehta: Correct, a heart patient is a broad term for a patient with cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular disease includes patients with hypertension, coronary artery disease, prior heart attack or stroke, heart valve problems, heart rhythm abnormalities or heart failure. Patients with heart transplants are often on immunosuppressive medications and are at highest risk given the limited reserve of the immune system to fight viral diseases.
It is important for us to discuss a misnomer of COVID-19. It is a disease that affects patients of all ages; COVID-19 is not just a disease of the elderly. Although the majority of younger patients will have more mild symptoms, they are at risk for transmitting to older patients who may go on to develop more severe symptoms. COVID-19 also spreads through asymptomatic transmission, and patients who don’t know they have the disease can spread it to others through close contact. Despite the fact that younger patients with COVID-19 have a milder disease course, there are examples of younger patients on ventilators and dying around the world, so it is important for everyone to work together and practice stay-at-home instructions.
Q: Why does a heart patient, specifically, need to be concerned about COVID-19?
Dr. Mehta: Patients with cardiovascular disease are more likely to contract the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes Coronavirus Disease 2019, more commonly known as COVID-19. They suffer hospitalization, develop more severe illness from the virus, and are more likely to die from COVID-19. The stakes are high for our heart patients, and that is why following the recommendations to avoid getting the virus is extremely important.
Q: Are there any additional precautions or suggestions you have for heart patients, aside from handwashing and social distancing?
Dr. Mehta: Older adults and those patients with underlying cardiovascular disease are at higher risk for developing more serious complications from COVID-19. In addition to these Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendations—staying at home if possible, washing hands often, keeping at least six feet distance from others, staying up-to-date with vaccinations, and finding ways to cope with stress and anxiety—here are some additional recommendations I have:
Q: If a heart patient thinks he or she has been exposed to COVID-19, should they call their cardiologist or primary care physician?
Dr. Mehta: We have set up a NCH COVID-19 Hotline for related questions at 847-618-1000, Option 9. In addition to the hotline, our patients with COVID-19 symptoms should call their primary care physician’s office and obtain a referral to the ambulatory COVID clinic. The COVID clinic has capability for lab work, chest X-ray and provider visits to triage patients for home quarantine or direct hospital admission, thereby minimizing exposures in the emergency room. For cardiac-related issues or questions, patients are encouraged to continue to follow usual protocol and contact their cardiologist’s office.