神经系统和罕见疾病患者优先接种COVID-19疫苗

G. Pfeffer, S. Jacob, J. Preston
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引用次数: 2

摘要

由严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2 (SARS-CoV-2)引起的大流行疾病已导致许多常见的神经系统并发症的鉴定,这些并发症可能直接或间接由感染引起[1]。最著名的神经系统症状是嗅觉缺失/味觉障碍(嗅觉/味觉丧失)[2],其对SARS-CoV-2的独特性一直存在争议[3];尽管有肌炎和横纹肌溶解的报道[4,5],但骨骼肌受累也很常见,幸运的是,在大多数情况下是轻微的(主要是肌痛)。很少出现更严重的神经系统并发症[6]。在中枢神经系统中,一些已描述的表型包括脑病[7]、神经免疫综合征[8]和肌阵挛/共济失调[9]。缺血性卒中似乎在COVID-19患者中具有更严重的结局,但在最近的大型系列研究中并不常见[10]。外周神经系统并发症主要涉及上述骨骼肌并发症,以及格林-巴罗综合征的变异型[11-13]。据报道,多重单神经炎在一系列COVID-19危重症患者中发病率很高[14],这是一组神经功能损伤可能难以识别并可能被误诊为危重症神经/肌病的患者。当出现神经系统综合征时,与COVID-19患者死亡率增加有关[15]。SARS-CoV-2通过血管紧张素转换酶2 (ACE2)感染细胞,ACE2是一种大量存在于包括中枢和周围神经系统神经元和肌肉在内的多种细胞类型中的蛋白质[16-18]。因此,除了缺氧、炎症级联和其他终末器官损伤引起的神经损伤外,病毒感染还可能直接导致神经系统并发症。因此,人们担心,已存在神经系统疾病的患者可能面临更大的神经系统并发症风险,或从COVID-19中获得更严重的结果[19]。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID-19 Vaccine Priority for People With Neurologic and Rare Diseases
The pandemic illness caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has led to the identification of numerous common neurologic complications, which may result directly or indirectly from infection [1]. The most well-known neurologic symptom is anosmia/dysgeusia (loss of sense of smell/taste) [2] whose uniqueness to SARS-CoV-2 has been debated [3]; involvement of skeletal muscles is also very common and fortunately mild in most cases (predominantly myalgias), although myositis and rhabdomyolysis are described [4, 5]. Rarely, more significant neurologic complications arise [6]. In the central nervous system, some of the described phenotypes include encephalopathy [7], neuroimmunological syndromes [8], and myoclonus/ataxia [9]. Ischemic stroke appears to have a more severe outcome in COVID-19 patients but was not more common in a recent large series [10]. Peripheral nervous system complications mainly relate to above-mentioned complications of skeletal muscle, as well as variants of Guillain-Barré syndrome [11-13]. Mononeuritis multiplex has been described with high prevalence in a series of critically ill patients with COVID-19 [14], which is a group of patients in whom neurologic impairments may be difficult to identify and may be misattributed to critical illness neuro/ myopathy. When present, neurologic syndromes have been associated with increased mortality in COVID-19 patients [15]. SARS-CoV-2 infects cells via angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), a protein found abundantly among numerous cell types including neurones of the central and peripheral nervous systems, and muscle [16-18]. Therefore, neurologic complications may occur as a direct consequence of viral infection, in addition to neurologic damage resulting from hypoxia, the inflammatory cascade, and other end-organ injuries. As a result, there is concern that patients with pre-existing neurological disorders may be at greater risk of neurological complications, or more severe outcomes in general from COVID-19 [19].
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