COVID-19大流行后红细胞变化的可能性

Maral Barzegar-Amini, R. Aboutorabi, R. Basiri
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Another important point was that 80 percent of patients experienced mild or no symptoms of this disease which were excluded from this study. However, COVID -19 affected their health conditions as well as severe patients.  It is clear that exposure to the virus in the recent pandemic is unavoidable and no one can be sure about the previous infection of the studied cases.Furthermore,  many people were reluctant to take a PCR test despite mild symptoms and also, the PCR test has a high false-negative rate, which is affected by the sampling method and the time of interval5, 6. It is suggested researchers investigate the COVID-19 effects on the general population. \nMost COVID-19 patients reported breathlessness and reduced fitness, which might be related to pulmonary damage and altered oxygen uptake into the red blood cells (RBC), leading to hypoxemia. \nSome studies demonstrated that COVID-19 altered RBC morphology and revealed a higher percentage of elongated RBC(7). The RBC deformability was significantly increased in COVID-19 patients7. Nader et al. showed that RBC aggregation increased in COVID-19 patients and correlated positively with the hospitalization length8. In a recent study, it was found that oxidation and fragmentation of ankyrin, spectrin beta, and the N-terminal cytosolic domain of band 3 (AE1) may cause RBCs disability in COVID- 19 patients, who could respond to environmental changes in hemoglobin oxygen saturation/oxidant stress. Nonetheless, there were no alterations in hematological parameters, such as RBC count, hematocrit, or mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration9. Based on these reports, the count of normal RBC is admissible, but maybe the function of RBCs in oxygen transfer have changes. \nThe above-mentioned studies indicated the temporary effects of COVID-19 on RBCS, but COVID-19 may cause some long-term effects on RBCs10. There is enough evidence indicating that the numbers of RBC and hematocrit (HCT) increase significantly in response to hypoxic environments, similar to changes that occur by living in high-altitude places11. With the large-scale outbreak of the COVID epidemic worldwide, the number of people using protective masks has increased rapidly. Using masks can cause problems, such as hypoxia symptoms, which increase RBC mass and HCT for a long time12,13. According to recent studies, wearing a mask can alter peripheral Spo2 after two hours, and it can cause small but significant changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral blood oxygen saturation (StO2) while wearing diffrent types of masks (surgical and FFP2)14,15. \nBased on the above-mentioned studies, the significant changes in RBC functions after the COVID-19 pandemic can be concluded, however the definitive diagnosis is not possible using routine laboratory tests. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行给社会经济以及个人、身体和心理健康带来了很多变化。COVID-19可能导致急性呼吸综合征、凝血功能障碍、血管衰竭和器官损伤1-3。Huang L等对2469例重症COVID-19患者进行了为期两年的随访,是迄今为止随访时间最长的一次。他们证明,两年后,COVID-19幸存者的健康状况明显低于一般人群,并建议紧急探索该疾病的发病机制4。除此之外,本研究还存在一些重要问题。首先,这不是一项包括不同地理区域、民族、种族和国家的国际研究。另一个重要的一点是,80%的患者经历了轻微或没有这种疾病的症状,这被排除在这项研究之外。然而,COVID -19不仅影响了重症患者,也影响了他们的健康状况。显然,在最近的大流行中接触该病毒是不可避免的,没有人能够确定所研究病例以前的感染情况。此外,许多人在症状较轻的情况下不愿进行PCR检测,而且PCR检测的假阴性率较高,这受采样方法和间隔时间5,6的影响。建议研究人员调查COVID-19对普通人群的影响。大多数COVID-19患者报告呼吸困难和健康状况下降,这可能与肺损伤和红细胞摄氧量改变有关,导致低氧血症。一些研究表明,COVID-19改变了红细胞形态,显示出更高比例的细长红细胞(7)。COVID-19患者红细胞变形能力显著增高7。Nader等研究表明,在COVID-19患者中RBC聚集增加,且与住院时间呈正相关8。最近的一项研究发现,锚蛋白、谱蛋白β和3带n端胞质结构域(AE1)的氧化和断裂可能导致COVID- 19患者红细胞失能,这些患者可能对血红蛋白氧饱和度/氧化应激的环境变化做出反应。然而,血液学参数没有改变,如红细胞计数、红细胞压积或平均红细胞血红蛋白浓度9。根据这些报告,正常红细胞计数是可以接受的,但可能红细胞在氧传递中的功能发生了变化。上述研究表明COVID-19对RBCS的影响是暂时的,但COVID-19可能对RBCs10产生一定的长期影响。有足够的证据表明,红细胞和红细胞压积(HCT)的数量在缺氧环境下显著增加,类似于生活在高海拔地区所发生的变化11。随着新冠肺炎疫情在全球范围内的大规模爆发,使用防护口罩的人数迅速增加。使用口罩会引起一些问题,比如缺氧症状,这会长期增加红细胞质量和HCT 12,13。根据最近的研究,戴口罩可以在2小时后改变周围Spo2,并且在戴不同类型的口罩(外科口罩和FFP2口罩)时,可以引起脑血流量(CBF)和脑血氧饱和度(StO2)的微小但显著的变化14,15。基于上述研究,可以得出COVID-19大流行后红细胞功能的显著变化,但无法通过常规实验室检查进行明确诊断。鉴于红细胞计数的长期变化,缺乏针对COVID-19大流行前后红细胞变化的基于人群的研究,以及红细胞计数在疾病诊断特别是贫血中的关键作用,似乎有必要进行更多的研究。在COVID-19大流行后新的健康状况下,需要重新检查参考区间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Possibility of Red Blood Cell Changes after COVID-19 Pandemic
Dear editor,   The COVID-19 pandemic caused a lot of changes in society and the economy as well as individual, physical, and mental health. COVID-19 might cause acute respiratory syndrome, coagulopathy, vascular failure, and organ damage1-3. In the study by Huang L et al., 2469 patients who recovered from severe COVID-19 were followed up for two years, the longest follow-up until now. They demonstrated that COVID-19 survivors had remarkably lower health status than the general population after two years and suggested urgent exploration into the pathogenesis of the disease4. Otherwise, there were some important issues with this study. First, it was not an international study that included different geographic regions, ethnicities, races, and countries. Another important point was that 80 percent of patients experienced mild or no symptoms of this disease which were excluded from this study. However, COVID -19 affected their health conditions as well as severe patients.  It is clear that exposure to the virus in the recent pandemic is unavoidable and no one can be sure about the previous infection of the studied cases.Furthermore,  many people were reluctant to take a PCR test despite mild symptoms and also, the PCR test has a high false-negative rate, which is affected by the sampling method and the time of interval5, 6. It is suggested researchers investigate the COVID-19 effects on the general population. Most COVID-19 patients reported breathlessness and reduced fitness, which might be related to pulmonary damage and altered oxygen uptake into the red blood cells (RBC), leading to hypoxemia. Some studies demonstrated that COVID-19 altered RBC morphology and revealed a higher percentage of elongated RBC(7). The RBC deformability was significantly increased in COVID-19 patients7. Nader et al. showed that RBC aggregation increased in COVID-19 patients and correlated positively with the hospitalization length8. In a recent study, it was found that oxidation and fragmentation of ankyrin, spectrin beta, and the N-terminal cytosolic domain of band 3 (AE1) may cause RBCs disability in COVID- 19 patients, who could respond to environmental changes in hemoglobin oxygen saturation/oxidant stress. Nonetheless, there were no alterations in hematological parameters, such as RBC count, hematocrit, or mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration9. Based on these reports, the count of normal RBC is admissible, but maybe the function of RBCs in oxygen transfer have changes. The above-mentioned studies indicated the temporary effects of COVID-19 on RBCS, but COVID-19 may cause some long-term effects on RBCs10. There is enough evidence indicating that the numbers of RBC and hematocrit (HCT) increase significantly in response to hypoxic environments, similar to changes that occur by living in high-altitude places11. With the large-scale outbreak of the COVID epidemic worldwide, the number of people using protective masks has increased rapidly. Using masks can cause problems, such as hypoxia symptoms, which increase RBC mass and HCT for a long time12,13. According to recent studies, wearing a mask can alter peripheral Spo2 after two hours, and it can cause small but significant changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral blood oxygen saturation (StO2) while wearing diffrent types of masks (surgical and FFP2)14,15. Based on the above-mentioned studies, the significant changes in RBC functions after the COVID-19 pandemic can be concluded, however the definitive diagnosis is not possible using routine laboratory tests. According to long-term changes in RBC count, the lack of any population-based studies on RBC changes before and after the COVID-19 pandemic, and the key role of RBC count in diagnosing disease, especially in anemia, more investigations seem to be necessary. Reference intervals need to be re-examined in the new health conditions after the COVID-19 pandemic.
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