Association of COVID-19 and other viral infections with interstitial lung diseases, pulmonary fibrosis, and pulmonary hypertension: A narrative review.

0 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy Pub Date : 2020-11-26 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.29390/cjrt-2020-021
Elham Atabati, Amir Dehghani-Samani, Sayyed Gholamreza Mortazavimoghaddam
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

Background: Interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) include a broad range of diffuse parenchymal lung disorders and are characterized by diffuse parenchymal lung abnormalities leading to irreversible fibrosis. ILDs are correlated with the occurrence of pulmonary fibrosis (PF), which generally also results in pulmonary hypertension (PH). Interferons, secreted in larger amounts during viral infections, are an important possible risk factor contributing to this outcome.

Aims: In this narrative review, the role of 10 different viral infections on the generation/development of ILDs and their outcomes are described in detail. The aim of this review is to determine the probable risk that COVID-19 and other viral infections pose in the post-infection development of ILDs, PF, and PH.

Methods: Searches in PubMed (Medline), Google Scholar, Web of Science (ISI, Researcher ID, Publons), ResearchGate, Scopus, and secondary sources yielded 134 studies. After exclusion criteria, 92 studies containing the terms "Coronavirus" (COVID-19), "Interstitial Lung Diseases," "Pulmonary Fibrosis," "Pulmonary Hypertension" and "viral infections" were selected for inclusion. Selected articles were read with a focus on the roles of the 10 commonly studied viral infections on generation/intensification of ILDs and classified according to their dominant effect on the respiratory system, with a focus on each infection's effects on parenchyma of the lungs and generation and/or intensification of ILDs.

Results: This review found that ILDs, PF, and PH can occur after a COVID-19 viral infection. Similar results are also seen in post-infection cases of other viral infections, including Epstein-Barr virus, Cytomegalovirus, Human herpesvirus-8, adenovirus, Hepatitis C, Torque-Teno (Transfusion-Transmitted) Virus, Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.

Conclusion: Results of current studies show probable possibility for generation and/or intensification of ILDs in COVID-19 infected patients like other studied viruses. Studies on determination of the actual prevalence of ILD, PF and PH in post-COVID-19 infected patients, follow-up studies on the prevention of ILDs in recovered COVID-19 patients, and meta-analyzed studies on pulmonary outcomes of pandemic corona viruses are strongly recommended as topics for future studies.

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COVID-19和其他病毒感染与间质性肺疾病、肺纤维化和肺动脉高压的关联:一项叙述性综述
背景:间质性肺疾病(ILDs)包括广泛的弥漫性肺实质疾病,其特征是弥漫性肺实质异常导致不可逆纤维化。ILDs与肺纤维化(PF)的发生相关,而PF通常也会导致肺动脉高压(PH)。在病毒感染期间大量分泌的干扰素是导致这一结果的一个重要的可能危险因素。目的:在这篇叙述性综述中,详细描述了10种不同的病毒感染在ild的产生/发展中的作用及其结果。本综述的目的是确定COVID-19和其他病毒感染对ild、PF和ph感染后发展的可能风险。方法:在PubMed (Medline)、Google Scholar、Web of Science (ISI, Researcher ID, Publons)、ResearchGate、Scopus和二手来源中进行检索,共获得134项研究。根据排除标准,92项包含“冠状病毒”(COVID-19)、“间质性肺疾病”、“肺纤维化”、“肺动脉高压”和“病毒感染”的研究被纳入。阅读选定的文章,重点关注10种常见的病毒感染对ild的产生/强化的作用,并根据它们对呼吸系统的主要影响进行分类,重点关注每种感染对肺实质的影响以及ild的产生和/或强化。结果:本综述发现COVID-19病毒感染后可发生ILDs、PF和PH。在感染后的其他病毒感染病例中也可以看到类似的结果,包括爱泼斯坦-巴尔病毒、巨细胞病毒、人疱疹病毒-8、腺病毒、丙型肝炎、输血传播病毒、人类免疫缺陷病毒、严重急性呼吸综合征和中东呼吸综合征。结论:目前的研究结果表明,与其他研究的病毒一样,COVID-19感染患者的ild可能产生和/或增强。强烈建议研究COVID-19感染后患者ILD、PF和PH的实际患病率,康复后COVID-19患者ILD预防的随访研究,以及大流行冠状病毒肺结局的荟萃分析研究作为未来研究的主题。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy
Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy Health Professions-Health Professions (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: The CJRT is published four times a year and represents the interests of respiratory therapists nationally and internationally. The CJRT has been redesigned to act as an educational dissemination tool. The CJRT encourages submission of original articles, papers, commentaries, case studies, literature reviews and directed reading papers. Submissions can be sent to Rita Hansen.
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