London: Patients with Covid-19 and vertebral fractures are twice as likely to die from the disease, says a study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
"Vertebral fractures are a marker of frailty, and for the first time we show that individuals who have such fractures appear to be at increased risk of severe Covid-19," said the study lead author Andrea Giustina from the San Raffaele Vita-Salute University in Italy.
These fractures are typically caused by osteoporosis (weak, brittle bones). Vertebral fractures are prevalent in Covid-19 patients and can influence cardiorespiratory function and disease outcomes.
They were more likely to need ventilators and were twice as likely to die compared to those without fractures. The death rate was higher in patients with severe fractures, the researchers reported.
Vertebral fractures may integrate the cardiorespiratory risk of Covid-19 patients, being a useful and easy to measure a clinical marker of fragility and poor prognosis, according to the researchers.
"A simple thoracic x-ray can detect these fractures and morphometric evaluation should be performed in Covid-19 patients at hospital admission," Giustina added.
For the findings, the researchers studied the x-rays of 114 Covid-19 patients and detected thoracic vertebral fractures in 35 per cent.
These patients were older and more affected by high blood pressure and heart disease.
"We suggest that morphometric thoracic vertebral evaluation should be performed in all suspected Covid-19 patients undergoing chest X-rays," the study authors noted.
Vertebral fractures occur when the bony block or vertebral body in the spine collapses, which can lead to severe pain, deformity and loss of height.
This report from IANS has been edited