Journal article
Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, Cambridge University Press, 2021
APA
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Ismail, F., Farag, A., Haq, S., & Kamal, M. (2021). Clinical Characteristics of the First 100 Patients of COVID-19 in Tobruk, Libya: A Brief Report From Low-Resource Settings. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.
Chicago/Turabian
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Ismail, Faisal, Atiya Farag, S. Haq, and M. Kamal. “Clinical Characteristics of the First 100 Patients of COVID-19 in Tobruk, Libya: A Brief Report From Low-Resource Settings.” Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness (2021).
MLA
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Ismail, Faisal, et al. “Clinical Characteristics of the First 100 Patients of COVID-19 in Tobruk, Libya: A Brief Report From Low-Resource Settings.” Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, Cambridge University Press, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{faisal2021a,
title = {Clinical Characteristics of the First 100 Patients of COVID-19 in Tobruk, Libya: A Brief Report From Low-Resource Settings},
year = {2021},
journal = {Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
author = {Ismail, Faisal and Farag, Atiya and Haq, S. and Kamal, M.}
}
Objective: This study aims to report the clinical features of a cohort of patients with suspected coronavirus disease (COVID-19) from Tobruk, Libya, and reflect upon the diagnosis challenge in low-resource settings. Methods: A descriptive report of the first 100 patients with suspected COVID-19 who have visited the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and COVID-19 screening clinic at the National Centre for Disease Control in Tobruk, Libya. Results: The most common presenting symptoms were fever (90%), cough (89%), dyspnea (85%), sore throat (79%), fatigue (78%), headache (64%), loss of smell (52%), loss of taste (53%), loss of appetite (43%), nausea and vomiting (26%), diarrhea (22%), and rhinorrhea (16%); 51% of the patients had lymphocytopenia, whereas 13% had thrombocytopenia. Bilateral infiltrates were the most common radiologic finding on chest X-ray (76%), and COVID-19 IgM and/or IgG antibodies were detected in 80% of the patients, whereas only 37% of the patients were tested positive by the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Conclusions: The disease continued its spread across the region. Fever, cough, and dyspnea were the main symptoms; 21% of the patients did not have any chest X-ray abnormalities. Initial negative results for either antibody testing or RT-PCR-testing for COVID-19 do not rule out the infection.