Background/Objectives: Post-coronavirus syndrome (long-COVID) refers to a multi-systemic range of symptoms that follows acute SARS-CoV-3 infection. Long-COVID has been linked with autonomic neuropathy as well as dry-eye disease (DED), an umbrella term that includes a variety of ocular symptoms and signs. Despite these associations, little is known about the co-occurrence of DED and dysautonomia symptoms in individuals with long-COVID. This study aims to examine relationships between dysautonomia and ocular symptoms in a long-COVID patient population. Methods: Cross-sectional study of 162 veterans with long-COVID. The Composite Autonomic Symptom Score-31 (COMPASS-31) assessed dysautonomia symptoms, and the NASA lean test and heart-rate variability metrics captured dysautonomia signs. Dry-eye disease (DED) symptoms were measured with the 5-Item Dry-Eye Questionnaire (DEQ5) and the Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI), while ocular pain intensity and neuropathic pain descriptors were evaluated using a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) and select questions from the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory modified for the Eye (NPSI-Eye), respectively. Results: Most participants (78%) reported DED symptoms (DEQ5 ≥ 6). Nearly all COMPASS-31 domains were associated with DED symptoms, with the strongest correlation observed between the OSDI and pupillomotor scores (r = 0.67, p p Conclusions: DED symptoms, including ocular pain intensity, relate to autonomic symptoms in a long-COVID cohort. While associations with autonomic signs were less consistent, these data suggest that subtle autonomic variability relates to ocular pain in the long-COVID setting.
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