| Literature DB >> 35594336 |
D Castanares-Zapatero1, P Chalon1, L Kohn1, M Dauvrin1, J Detollenaere1, C Maertens de Noordhout1, C Primus-de Jong1, I Cleemput1, K Van den Heede1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After almost 2 years of fighting against SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the number of patients enduring persistent symptoms long after acute infection is a matter of concern. This set of symptoms was referred to as "long COVID", and it was defined more recently as "Post COVID-19 condition" by the World health Organization (WHO). Although studies have revealed that long COVID can manifest whatever the severity of inaugural illness, the underlying pathophysiology is still enigmatic. AIM: To conduct a comprehensive review to address the putative pathophysiology underlying the persisting symptoms of long COVID.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Long COVID; pathology; physiology; post-COVID-19 condition
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35594336 PMCID: PMC9132392 DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2022.2076901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 5.348
Figure 1.Flow diagram of literature search and selection process of the studies (PRISMA flow diagram).
Pathophysiological mechanisms that may potentially be involved in long COVID symptoms.
| System | Mechanisms |
|---|---|
| Neurological |
Neuro-inflammation: persistent inflammatory process secondary to viral invasion or following the acute illness phase, resulting in brain microglia activation Activation of coagulation: microthrombosis impairing tissue vascularization and neurotransmission. Autoimmunity: aberrant immune response following the acute illness phase or molecular mimicry between SARS-CoV-2 and body antigens Metabolic brain disorders Residual virus particles: contributing to a low-grade smoldering inflammatory response Direct (stroke, Guillain Barré syndrome, myelitis) or indirect (hemodynamic and coagulation disorders, arrythmia) nervous system damage during the acute phase Activation of nerves (peripheral trigeminal nerve, nerve roots) |
| Fatigue |
Neuro-inflammation Psychological factors Peripheral factors (musculoskeletal impairment) Environmental factors (social isolation temperature, humidity) Associated comorbidities Glymphatic-lymphatic system congestion Bioenergetic disorders in muscles due to mitochondria dysfunction |
| Smell and taste |
Olfactory dysfunction due to viral invasion of olfactory mucosa (sustentacular cells) |
| Cardiovascular and coagulation |
Endothelial dysfunction and subsequent coagulation activation – Endothelial invasion (ACE2 receptor) and consecutive coagulation activation and platelet/leucocyte attraction – Direct viral-induced activations of platelets (ACE2 receptor) – Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs): inflammation-coagulation (Factor XII) – Direct complement activation (inflammation) – Pericytes invasion and endothelial cell injury (loss of endothelial homeostasis and integrity) – Antiphospholipid antibodies Cardiomyocyte impairments: viral invasion (through ACE2 receptor) Damages of the autonomic nervous system: intrathoracic chemo- and mechanoreceptors involved in cardiovascular reflexes |
| Respiratory system |
Lung fibrosis Pulmonary vasculature damages (including microvessels) potentially leading to pulmonary hypertension. Damages in the autonomic nervous system (intrathoracic chemo and mechanoreceptors involved in the respiratory reflexes) |
| Immune system |
Chronic dysregulated immune system activation: low-grade inflammation leading to multiple organ dysfunction. Mast cell activation syndrome Persistent smoldering infection Multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) |
| Musculoskeletal system |
Disruption of myocytes and fibroblast activation () Alteration of microcirculation in bones (hypercoagulability, leukocyte aggregation, and vessel inflammation) Autoimmunity and NETs activation in joints |
| Gastro-intestinal and hepato-biliary system |
Post-infection gastro-intestinal dysfunction Microbiota alterations Hepato-biliary damage Autonomic nerve system disorder (gut motility disorders) |
| Renal system |
Severity of critical illness Renal cell viral invasion Microangiopathy Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone pathway disorders Glomerulopathy |
| Endocrine system |
Direct damage on the thyroid gland, subacute thyroiditis, low-T3 syndrome Viral invasion of pancreatic β cells |
| Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome |
Genetical predisposition host factors Uncontrolled T-cell immune response (triggered by SARS-CoV-2) Complement activation Molecular mimicry between antigens |
Figure 2.Different pathophysiological mechanisms potentially leading to persisting symptoms after COVID-19 (this figure has been included in the Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE) report 344) [9].
Figure 3.Mechanisms potentially involved in cardio-respiratory consequences after COVID-19 (this figure has been included in the Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE) report 344) [9].
Pathophysiological mechanisms identified in patients with long COVID symptoms.
| System | Involved symptom(s) | Mechanisms |
|---|---|---|
| Neurology |
Cognitive and mental health disorders Pain Headache Fatigue Anosmia/Agueusia Neuropathy | Functional brain disturbances
Hypometabolic activity in various cerebral zones Reduced activity of the GABA inhibition Micro-structural, volumetric and vascularization disorders |
| Smell and taste | Anosmia/Agueusia | Structural lesions in the olfactory and taste system at imaging and histology
Injury in olfactory neuronal pathways Persistent inflammation of the neuroepithelium and with SARS-CoV-2 RNA identification Invasion and replication of SARS-CoV-2 in taste buds type II cells |
| Cardiovascular system |
Fatigue Dyspnoea Chest pain | Persistent vascular inflammation
Macrovascular vascular inflammation Microvascular inflammation: increased level of cytokines, circulating endothelial cells, coagulation activation microvascular retinal impairment (at autopsy, evidence of endothelial cells and cardiomyocytes viral invasion with signs of structural alterations) |
| Respiratory |
Dyspnoea Chest pain Cough | Persistent inflammation and dysregulated host response of lung repair
Increased plasma biomarkers of lung inflammation and fibrosis (Lipocalin 2, Matrix metalloproteinase-7, Hepatocyte growth factor) Persisting inflammation in lungs, mediastinal lymph nodes, spleen, and liver Involvement of iron homeostasis disturbances in end-organ damage Relationship between metabolic abnormalities and lung sequelae |
| Gastro-intestinal system | No specific symptom | Gut microbiota modifications after recovery
Decreases gut commensals with known immunomodulatory potential Perturbed composition of microbiota correlated inflammation biomarkers |
| Immune system | Multi-system symptoms | Persistent immune inflammatory response impairing organ functioning
Remaining inflammation in blood samples analysis, long-lasting phenotypic and functional disorders of lymphocytes, decreased amounts of dendritic cells and persisting alterations of activation markers Signs of mild organ impairment at magnetic resonance imaging and [18F] FDG PET/CT |
| Dermatological system | Skin disorders | At biopsy, presence of lymphocytic or neutrophilic infiltrates, endothelitis, microangiopathy, and microthrombosis |