| Literature DB >> 34108015 |
Dongdong Yu1, Qingru Du2,3, Shengguang Yan4, Xu-Guang Guo5, Yehao He6, Guodong Zhu7,8, Kewei Zhao9, Shi Ouyang10.
Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread to many countries around the world. In addition to lung disease, severe cases also displayed varying degrees of liver injury. This article will describe the latest developments regarding coronavirus and the pathogenesis of liver injury, the prone population and clinical characteristics of these patients, as well as providing some suggestions for clinical treatment.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Liver injury; SARS-CoV2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34108015 PMCID: PMC8188532 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-021-01593-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
The definition of some concepts in this paper
| Classification | Definition |
|---|---|
| Liver injury [ | ALT and/or AST over 3 × ULN, ALP, GGT, and/or TBIL over 2 × ULN |
| Hepatocellular [ | elevated ALT and/or AST more than 3 × ULN |
| Cholestatic [ | elevated ALP or GGT over twice the ULN |
| Mixed (Abnormality) [ | Both elevated ALT and/or AST more than 3 × ULN, and elevated ALP or GGT over twice the ULN |
| Cytokine Storm | The inflammatory markers C-reactive protein (CRP), serum ferritin, LDH, D-dimer, IL-6 and IL-2 in severe COVID-19 patients are significantly increased |
| Mild cases of COVID-19 [ | patient can present as common symptoms: fever, dry cough, fatigue, headache, sore throat |
| Severe cases of COVID-19 [ | Patient who fits any one of the following condition: 1. Respiratory rate ≥ 30 breath/min 2. SpO2 ≤ 93% 3.PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 300 mmHg (1 mmHg = 0.133 kPa) |
Liver injury prone population
| Author | Liver injury prone population |
|---|---|
| Guan [ | Severe COVID-19 patients > Mild COVID-19 patients |
| Xie [ | Male > Female; The patients with severe lung disease; But patients’ age, previous medication history and symptoms without significant difference (P > 0.05) |
| Mao [ | Hubei Province in China > other parts of China; Severe COVID-19 Patients > Mild COVID-19 patients |
| Cai [ | Aged; Initial symptoms is cough; Higher BMI; Male; Patients with underlying liver diseases; |
| Zhang [ | The patients with severe lung disease |
| Singh [ | Patients with underlying liver diseases > Patients without underlying liver diseases |
Fig. 1Possible mechanism of liver injury induced by COVID-19
Notes on liver injury
| Author | Patient | Abnormal liver biochemical indexes | Liver injury note | Time trend of liver enzyme elevation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huang [ | 41 | ALT: 32.0 (21.0–50.0) U/L AST: 34.0 (26.0–48.0) U/L TBIL: 11.7 (9.5–13.9) μmol/L | There were significant differences in liver biochemical indexes between severe patients and mild patients (all P < 0.05) | Not mentioned |
| Chen [ | 99 | ALT: 39.0 (22.0–53.0) U/L AST: 34.0 (26.0–48.0) U/L TBIL: 15.1 (7.3) μmol/L | Most patients had mild liver dysfunction | Liver enzymes increased slightly |
| Zhang [ | 115 | ALT: 25.71 (9–50) U/L AST: 28.30 (15–40) U/L TBIL: 11.31 (5–21) μmol/L | Slight abnormality of liver function; There were significant differences in liver biochemical indexes between severe patients and mild patients (all P < 0.05) | The changes of ALT, AST and TBIL in ICU patients were not significant with time (P > 0.05) |
| Bloom [ | 60 | ALT: 39 (15.0–63.0) U/L AST: 55 (18–92) U/L TBIL: 0.9 ± 2.2 μmol/L | It has been proved that patients with severe COVID-19 have higher biochemical levels of liver | ALT and AST showed the same trend With the extension of time, there was a slight increase, which reached the peak on the ninth day, and then decreased slowly, and the increase was not more than 40 U/L |
| Wang [ | 138 | ALT: 24 (16–40) U/L AST: 31 (24–51) U/L TBIL: 9.8 (8.4–14.1) μmol/L | The levels of ALT and AST in ICU patients were significantly higher than those not in ICU patients | Not mentioned |
| Cardoso [ | 20 (critically ill patients) | Not mentioned | Liver injury is common, but usually transient and not severe. However, cholestasis is obvious | ALT and AST only increased slightly(10d in ICU), and the highest < 2 × ULN GGT increased more and more obviously, reaching 3 × ULN |
| Cai [ | 417 | ALT: 21 (15–31) U/L AST: 26.5 (21–35) U/L TBIL: 10.9 (8.3–16.3) μmol/L | AST, ALT and GGT were higher in severe patients | The increase of ALT and GGT was common, but the frequency of AST and TBIL was slightly lower |
| Xu [ | 25 (death) | ALT: 24 (16.5–46) U/L AST: 37 (29.5–57.5) U/L | Slight abnormality of liver function | Not mentioned |
| Wang [ | 105 | ALT: 23.5 (14.0–36.0) U/L (N = 105) AST: 24.2 (19.7, 34.8) U/L (N = 50) TBIL: 10.2 (7.4, 12.9) μmol/L (N = 50) | Severe COVID-19 patients are more likely to have liver dysfunction | During the treatment, most of the patients only had mild or isolated elevation, and most of them were normal after discharge |
Fig. 2Change of the median of liver biochemical indexs