The COVID-19 outbreak has led to a significant increase in the number of patients admitted to intensive care for respiratory distress. Early data indicate a particularly high risk of thrombotic risk to viral lung disease, particularly in the most severe patients, with a particularly high incidence of pulmonary embolism. Catheter thrombosis and extra-renal purification filters are also abnormally common. These thrombotic complications could contribute to the mortality observed in this pathology. The introduction of early curative anticoagulation in the most severe patients has just been proposed by the perioperative hemostasis interest group Biologically, a significant proportion of patients hospitalized in intensive care have a marked biological inflammatory syndrome, associated with signs of activation of clotting (a frank increase in D-dimers). The presence of circulating anticoagulants is common. Interestingly, thrombocytosis, normally observed in such inflammatory syndromes, is absent. In this context, it seems legitimate to explore these patients from a hemostasis perspective to identify the factors that cause this thrombotic over-risk, in order to minimize the occurrence of these complications.
Other: Extra blood sample
3 extra blood samples at day 0, 2 and 7
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adult patient (<18y)
- With a SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed by RT-PCR
- Hospitalized in intensive care
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients under guardianship/curator
- Anemia at 7 g/dL at inclusion
Charles TACQUARD
369551608 - +33
charlesambroise.tacquard@chru-strasbourg.fr