COVID-19 Updates: German Researchers Say Immunothrombosis Is The Cause Of Blood Clots In Lungs Of COVID-19 Patients
Source: COVID-19 Updates Aug 06, 2020 4 years, 3 months, 2 weeks, 1 day, 17 hours, 12 minutes ago
COVID-19 Updates: The SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus infects the respiratory tract and in severe cases, the infection can result in lung failure, which necessitates the use of mechanical ventilation. In addition, these patients develop further complications, such as pulmonary embolisms or thromboses (clots) in their veins. Whether or not virus-associated respiratory failure is functionally related to the systemic increase in the incidence of intravascular clot formation has remained unclear.
But a new study led by clinicians from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Dr Leo Nicolai and Dr Konstantin Stark, which appears in the journal Circulation, has identified a link between virus-induced changes in the blood vessels of the lung and the increased thrombotic risk.
https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.120.048488
Post-mortem examination of the lungs of COVID-19 patients who had died of the disease by Dr Nicolai and colleagues found many microclots within the finest branches of the pulmonary vasculature. Similar observations were made in the heart and the kidney.
Interestingly, these clots were primarily made up of platelets and activated immune cells, in particular neutrophils. Detailed analysis of the thrombi suggested that an activating interaction between platelets and neutrophils is responsible for promoting intravascular coagulation.
Typically, neutrophils belong to the innate immune system and their principal task is to fight invading pathogens. Their involvement in abnormal clotting has led to the designation of this process as
immunothrombosis. In COVID-19 patients, the stimulation of clot formation eventually compromises the supply of blood to nearby tissues. This in turn ultimately leads to respiratory failure, while the tendency to trigger clotting becomes systemic.
Utilizing multidimensional flow cytometry assays, the researchers showed that in COVID-19 patients who had suffered lung failure and required mechanical ventilation, the numbers of activated neutrophils and platelets in the circulation were greatly enhanced.
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As the two cell types reciprocally activate each other, these interactions lead to the formation of obstructive blood clots in the lung.
Furthermore, activated neutrophils extrude mesh-like complexes made up of DNA and cytoplasmatic proteins, which are known as neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). These normally serve to trap and destroy bacterial and viral pathogens, but they also play a significant role in
immunothrombosis by stabilizing thrombi.
Although this process is initially localized in the lungs, exacerbating respiratory failure and result in a systemic thrombogenic st
ate.
Dr Stark told Thailand Medical News, "These findings contribute to a better understanding of the pathophysiology that underlie disease progression in COVID-19. The study also identifies
immunothrombosis as a promising target for the prevention and treatment of lung failure and thrombotic complications that arise in cases of COVID-19."
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