| Literature DB >> 35650445 |
Svitlana Zubchenko1, Iryna Kril2, Olena Nadizhko2, Oksana Matsyura2, Valentyna Chopyak2.
Abstract
The global spread of SARS-CoV-2 points to unrivaled mutational variation of the virus, contributing to a variety of post-COVID sequelae in immunocompromised subjects and high mortality. Numerous studies have reported the reactivation of "sluggish" herpes virus infections in COVID-19, which exaggerate the course of the disease and complicate with lasting post-COVID manifestations CMV, EBV, HHV6). This study aimed to describe clinical and laboratory features of post-COVID manifestations accompanied by the reactivation of herpes virus infections (CMV, EBV, HHV6). 88 patients were recruited for this study, including subjects with reactivation of herpes viruses, 68 (72.3%) (main group) and 20 (27.7%) subjects without detectable DNA of herpesviruses (control group): 46 (52.3%) female and 42 (47.7%) male; median age was 41.4 ± 6.7 years. Patients with post-COVID manifestations presented with reactivation of EBV in 42.6%, HHV6 in 25.0%, and EBV plus HHV6 in 32.4%. Compared with controls, patients with herpes virus infections presented with more frequent slight fever temperature, headache, psycho-neurological disorders, pulmonary abnormalities and myalgia (p < 0.01), activation of liver enzymes, elevated CRP and D-dimer, and suppressed cellular immune response (p ≤ 0.05). Preliminary results indicate a likely involvement of reactivated herpes virus infections, primarily EBV infections in severe COVID-19 and the formation of the post-COVID syndrome. Patients with the post-COVID syndrome and reactivation of EBV and HHV6 infections are at high risk of developing various pathologies, including rheumatologic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: An autoimmune disease; COVID-19; Epstein–Barr virus; Herpes virus; Rheumatology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35650445 PMCID: PMC9159383 DOI: 10.1007/s00296-022-05146-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Int ISSN: 0172-8172 Impact factor: 3.580
Fig. 1Frequency of post-COVID-19 symptoms in patients, n = 88
Fig. 2The prevalence of chronic EBV, HHV6 in the active phase in patients with the post-COVID condition
Fig. 3The prevalence of activated EBV and HHV6 infections depending on biological media
Analysis of clinical manifestations in patients with the post-COVID condition of the main and control groups
| Clinical manifestations, amount of cases | Main group, | Control group, | Fisher’s criterion, F | Reliability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slight fever temperature ( | 60 (88.2%) | 7 (35.0%) | 4.620 | > 0.99 |
| Headaches ( | 59 (86.8%) | 9 (45.0%) | 3.641 | > 0.99 |
| Sleep disorders ( | 66 (97.1%) | 19 (95.0%) | 0.418 | < 0.95* |
| Cognitive impairments ( | 68 (100%) | 17 (85.0%) | 3.127 | > 0.99 |
| Irritability ( | 60 (88.2%) | 10 (50.0%) | 3.422 | > 0.99 |
| Depressive thoughts ( | 51 (75.0%) | 8 (40.0%) | 2.850 | > 0.99 |
| Persistent cough ( | 30 (44.1%) | 9 (45.0%) | 0.070 | < 0.95* |
| Loss of smell/taste ( | 27 (39.7%) | 9 (45.0%) | 0.421 | < 0.95* |
| Arthralgia ( | 30 (44.1%) | 6 (30.0%) | 1.154 | < 0.95* |
| Myalgia ( | 31 (45.6%) | 4 (20.0%) | 2.182 | > 0.95 |
| Hair loss | 25 (36.7%) | 7 (35.0%) | 0.145 | < 0.95* |
| Shortness of breath ( | 26 (38.2%) | 6 (30.0%) | 0.684 | < 0.95* |
| Chest pains ( | 20 (29.4%) | 6 (30.0%) | 0.051 | < 0.95* |
*Difference is not significant