Pulmonary embolism post-Covid-19 infection: physiopathological mechanisms and vascular damage biomarkers

Covid-19 infection is characterized by several acute complications, as well long-term sequelae, mostly sustained by endothelial dysfunction; several studies show that complications as pulmonary embolism (PE) are described both in the acute phase and after negativization. Aim of research was to evalu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and experimental medicine 2023-12, Vol.23 (8), p.4871-4880
Hauptverfasser: Petramala, Luigi, Sarlo, Francesca, Servello, Adriana, Baroni, Silvia, Suppa, Marianna, Circosta, Francesco, Galardo, Gioacchino, Gandini, Orietta, Marino, Luca, Cavallaro, Giuseppe, Iannucci, Gino, Concistrè, Antonio, Letizia, Claudio
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container_end_page 4880
container_issue 8
container_start_page 4871
container_title Clinical and experimental medicine
container_volume 23
creator Petramala, Luigi
Sarlo, Francesca
Servello, Adriana
Baroni, Silvia
Suppa, Marianna
Circosta, Francesco
Galardo, Gioacchino
Gandini, Orietta
Marino, Luca
Cavallaro, Giuseppe
Iannucci, Gino
Concistrè, Antonio
Letizia, Claudio
description Covid-19 infection is characterized by several acute complications, as well long-term sequelae, mostly sustained by endothelial dysfunction; several studies show that complications as pulmonary embolism (PE) are described both in the acute phase and after negativization. Aim of research was to evaluate anthropometric, bio-humoral, instrumental parameters in a group of patients affected by PE after recent Covid-19 infection compared to PE patients without previous Covid-19 infection. We enrolled 72 consecutive patients (35M, 37F) with acute PE, distinguished in relation to previous acute Covid-19 infection: 54 pts without previous acute Covid-19 infection and 18 pts with previous Covid-19 infection within negativity at least 2 months before PE diagnosis; 44 healthy subjects (21M, 23F) were recruited as control group. Patients who had previously developed Covid-19 needed hospitalization in high percentage (84%); this group showed significantly higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus than Covid-19-free PE patients, reduced serum levels of C-reactive protein, sST2 and PESI score. In post-Covid-19 PE group, we observed higher mean IMPROVE risk score, whereas in Covid-19-free group lower P/F ratio, higher radiological severity, and worse PESI score and severity index . Covid-19 infection affects not just the lung parenchyma but also other organs; endothelial damage plays pivotal role in long-term alterations; in high thrombotic risk group (recent hospitalization due to acute Covid-19 infection), we have described thrombotic complications characterized by persistent prothrombotic state after recovery, highlighted by well-known markers as PCR and D-Dimer as well as novel vascular marker (sST2).
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10238-023-01150-w
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subjects C-reactive protein
Clinical Practice
Complications
COVID-19
Diabetes mellitus
Embolism
Hematology
Infections
Internal Medicine
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Oncology
Parenchyma
Pulmonary embolisms
Serum levels
title Pulmonary embolism post-Covid-19 infection: physiopathological mechanisms and vascular damage biomarkers
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