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Seborrheic dermatitis (SD) is a common form of dermatitis
.
Immune disorders are believed to play a role in the pathogenesis of SD, and the prevalence of SD increases with age, immunosuppression and neuropsychiatric patients
This research was approved by the Institutional Review Board of George Washington University
.
We retrospectively analyzed the medical records of patients treated with SARSCoV-2 at the George Washington University Hospital and medical school colleagues
Using chi-square and t-tests for categorical and continuous variables, respectively, the sociodemographic characteristics of people with and without a diagnosis of SD and patients with severe and mild-to-moderate new coronary pneumonia were compared
.
With SARS-CoV-2 outcome as the dependent variable and SD as the binary independent variable, a binary Logistic regression model was established
In the multivariate model adjusted for the above covariates, SD and hospitalization (adjusted odds ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.
260.
08-0.
86, adjusted P value = 0.
1686), acute care level at the first visit (0.
68 [0.
331.
42], P=0.
5840), severe SARS coronavirus type 2 (0.
80[0.
272.
33], P=0.
8618), whether supplementary oxygen therapy is required (0.
24[0.
051.
11], P=0.
2338) is irrelevant
.
The length of hospital stay was prolonged (P=0.
Research strengths include testing multiple COVID-19 results and controlling for confounding factors in multivariate analysis
.
Limitations include that the cohort is from a single center, is ethnically homogeneous, and has no data on SD characteristics or SARS-CoV-2 mutations
Literature source: Rakita U, Kaundinya T, Guraya A, Lack of association between seborrheic dermatitis and SARS-CoV-2 outcomes.
Rakita U, Kaundinya T, Guraya A, Lack of association between seborrheic dermatitis and SARS-CoV-2 outcomes.
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