Panacea Journal of Medical Sciences
Panacea Journal of Medical Sciences (PJMS) open access, peer-reviewed triannually journal publishing since 2011 and is published under auspices of the “NKP Salve Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre”. With the aim of faster and better dissemination of knowledge, we will be publishing the article ‘Ahead of Print’ immediately on acceptance. In addition, the journal would allow free access (Open Access) to its contents, which is likely to attract more readers and citations to articles published in PJMS.Manuscripts must be prepared in accordance with “Uniform requiremen...

Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) in the acute coronary syndrome patients presenting in the pre and post-COVID-19 era
Page: 465-469
Background: The inflammatory pathways play a key role in the pathogenesis of acute coronary syndrome and the severe forms of COVID-19 disease. Thus inflammation may play an interrelation between these two critical situations.
Materials and Methods: In this study, the records of the patients of ACS admitted to the coronary care unit, were analyzed retrospectively. The two groups had 200 patients each. The group-A was randomly taken from the pre-COVID period of July to December 2019 while group-B patients were taken from the COVID/post-COVID period of July 2021 to December 2021. The two groups were compared for the severity of inflammation, through the leukocyte ratios of NLR and d-NLR.
Results: The neutrophil percentage as well as the ANC were significantly higher, while the percentage of lymphocytes and ALC were significantly lower in the group-B patients compared to the group-A patients (p ˂ 0.05). The NLR (mean ±SD) was significantly higher in group-B compared to group-A patients (6.38±4.84 vs 5.34±4.37, p ˂ 0.05), while the d-NLR showed no significant difference. The NLR values were significantly higher in group-B compared to group-A, for patients of age ˂ 45 years (7.13±5.8 vs 4.3±2.73, p ˂ 0.05) and for patients presenting with ST-Elevation ACS (7.17±5.2 vs 5.54±4.22, p ˂ 0.005).
Conclusion: The degree of inflammation as indirectly measured by the ratios of NLR and d-NLR, was found to be higher in the ACS patients presenting in the COVID/post-COVID era when compared to those in the pre-COVID era.
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- DOI 10.18231/pjms.v.15.i.2.465-469
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- Citation
- Received Date September 01, 2024
- Accepted Date November 09, 2024
- Publication Date August 19, 2025