| Literature DB >> 32438687 |
Shelley A Cole1, Hugo A Laviada-Molina2, Jeannette M Serres-Perales2, Ernesto Rodriguez-Ayala3, Raul A Bastarrachea1.
Abstract
An altered immune response to pathogens has been suggested to explain increased susceptibility to infectious diseases in patients with diabetes. Recent evidence has documented several immunometabolic pathways in patients with diabetes directly related to the COVID-19 infection. This also seems to be the case for prediabetic subjects with proinflammatory insulin resistance syndrome accompanied with prothrombotic hyperinsulinemic and dysglycemic states. Patients with frank hyperglycemia, dysglycemia and/or hyperinsulinemia develop systemic immunometabolic inflammation with higher levels of circulating cytokines. This deleterious scenario has been proposed as the underlying mechanism enhancing a cytokine storm-like hyperinflammatory state in diabetics infected with severe COVID-19 triggering multi-organ failure. Compared with moderately affected COVID-19 patients, diabetes was found to be highly prevalent among severely affected patients suggesting that this non-communicable disease should be considered as a risk factor for adverse outcomes. The COVID-19 pandemic mirrors with the diabetes pandemic in many pathobiological aspects. Our interest is to emphasize the ties between the immunoinflammatory mechanisms that underlie the morbidity and lethality when COVID-19 meets diabetes. This review brings attention to two pathologies of highly complex, multifactorial, developmental and environmentally dependent manifestations of critical importance to human survival. Extreme caution should be taken with diabetics with suspected symptoms of COVID-19 infection.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; GEMM family study; adipose tissue dysfunction; cytokine storm; diabetes; inflammation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32438687 PMCID: PMC7281197 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens9050389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Human transmission of SARS-CoV-2. Five out of 49 COVID-19 infected individuals would be diabetic in the US. There is a lack of routine clinical criteria for the diagnosis of individuals with insulin resistance or adipose tissue dysfunction. These entities are accompanied by chronic low-grade subclinical inflammation perhaps acting as the underlying mechanism enhancing a cytokine storm hyperinflammatory state that triggers multiorgan failure in COVID-19 infected individuals.
Figure 2COVID-19 meets diabetes at the tip of the triangle above the surface representing the environment, viral exposure and infection. SARS-CoV-2 enters human cells. Once inside the body (underneath the triangle’s surface) a diabetic state represented by a chronic low-grade subclinical systemic inflammation and a dysfunctional immune response (bottom part of the triangle) may host the scenario to enhance the deleterious cytokine storm hyperinflammatory state after COVID-19 infection (center of the triangle) leading to severe multi-organ failure. The COVID-19 pandemic mirrors the diabetes pandemic, or vice versa.