Cardiovascular Autonomic Nervous System in a Patient With Hereditary Angioedema Affected by COVID-19

Cureus. 2024 Mar 19;16(3):e56449. doi: 10.7759/cureus.56449. eCollection 2024 Mar.

Abstract

Autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulation in hereditary angioedema (HAE) and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is unknown. ANS alterations could be manifested during both the acute and post-acute phases of COVID-19. Implications of acute and chronic inflammation on ANS in HAE need to be addressed. In this case report, we monitored the systolic arterial blood pressure variability and baroreflex sensitivity in a female HAE patient both before experiencing COVID-19 symptoms and one month afterward. We also tracked the heart rate variability on the day preceding symptom onset, the day of symptom onset (SYM), the day following SYM, five days after SYM, the day of the first negative nasopharyngeal swab (i.e., 12 days after SYM), and one month after symptom onset. The results of this case report provide the characterization of vascular and cardiac autonomic profiles in an HAE patient until the resolution of an acute infection, a potential trigger for the acute HAE attack.

Keywords: baroreflex sensitivity; blood pressure variability; covid-19; heart rate variability analysis; hereditary angioedema without normal c1 inhibitor.

Publication types

  • Case Reports