4.6 Review

Long COVID-19 Pathophysiology: What Do We Know So Far?

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms11102458

Keywords

COVID-19; post-COVID-19; Long COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2

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Long COVID-19 is a recognized disease that affects millions of people worldwide, causing a wide range of symptoms. It can potentially affect any system, with the cardiovascular, central nervous, respiratory, and immune systems being the most commonly affected. Age, high BMI, female sex, previous hospitalization, and smoking are some of the risk factors. The exact mechanisms and pathophysiology are still not fully understood.
Long COVID-19 is a recognized entity that affects millions of people worldwide. Its broad clinical symptoms include thrombotic events, brain fog, myocarditis, shortness of breath, fatigue, muscle pains, and others. Due to the binding of the virus with ACE-2 receptors, expressed in many organs, it can potentially affect any system; however, it most often affects the cardiovascular, central nervous, respiratory, and immune systems. Age, high body mass index, female sex, previous hospitalization, and smoking are some of its risk factors. Despite great efforts to define its pathophysiology, gaps remain to be explained. The main mechanisms described in the literature involve viral persistence, hypercoagulopathy, immune dysregulation, autoimmunity, hyperinflammation, or a combination of these. The exact mechanisms may differ from system to system, but some share the same pathways. This review aims to describe the most prevalent pathophysiological pathways explaining this syndrome.

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