Obstructive Sleep Apnea as a Risk Factor for COVID-19 Severity—The Gut Microbiome as a Common Player Mediating Systemic Inflammation via Gut Barrier Dysfunction
Saif Mashaqi,Rekha Kallamadi,Abhishek Matta,Stuart F. Quan,Salma I. Patel,Daniel Combs,Lauren Estep,Joyce K. Lee-Iannotti,C. Smith,Sairam Parthasarathy,David Gozal +10 more
TL;DR: OSA may be a risk factor for worse COVID-19 clinical outcomes, and the shifts in gut microbiota associated with both CO VID-19 and OSA may mediate processes leading to bacterial translocation via a defective gut barrier which can then foster systemic inflammation.
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Abstract: The novel corona virus that is now known as (SARS-CoV-2) has killed more than six million people worldwide. The disease presentation varies from mild respiratory symptoms to acute respiratory distress syndrome and ultimately death. Several risk factors have been shown to worsen the severity of COVID-19 outcomes (such as age, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and obesity). Since many of these risk factors are known to be influenced by obstructive sleep apnea, this raises the possibility that OSA might be an independent risk factor for COVID-19 severity. A shift in the gut microbiota has been proposed to contribute to outcomes in both COVID-19 and OSA. To further evaluate the potential triangular interrelationships between these three elements, we conducted a thorough literature review attempting to elucidate these interactions. From this review, it is concluded that OSA may be a risk factor for worse COVID-19 clinical outcomes, and the shifts in gut microbiota associated with both COVID-19 and OSA may mediate processes leading to bacterial translocation via a defective gut barrier which can then foster systemic inflammation. Thus, targeting biomarkers of intestinal tight junction dysfunction in conjunction with restoring gut dysbiosis may provide novel avenues for both risk detection and adjuvant therapy.
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Citations
Estimación de translocación bacteriana mediante cuantificación de zonulina y su potencial como biomarcador pronóstico de muerte en una cohorte de pacientes Covid-19 moderados y severos
Luciano Augusto Palomino Kobayashi
- 17 Aug 2023
TL;DR: La zonulina se asocia con la mortalidad en pacientes hospitalizados con COVID-19, y puede ser un biomarcador pronóstico de muerte.
Obstructive sleep apnea and respiratory viruses in children: A secret alliance uncovered.
David Gozal
TL;DR: Obstructive sleep apnea in children is associated with increased susceptibility to respiratory viruses, including COVID-19, and may exacerbate viral infections, highlighting a potential secret alliance between sleep apnea and respiratory viruses in pediatric populations.
Identification of biomarkers and pathways for the SARS-CoV-2 infections in obstructive sleep apnea patients based on machine learning and proteomic analysis
Hong Luo,Jisong Yan,Rui Gong,Dingyu Zhang,Xia Zhou,Xianguang Wang +5 more
TL;DR: This study identifies 14 shared biomarkers and 10 hub genes between obstructive sleep apnea and SARS-CoV-2 infections, highlighting metabolic pathways and HSP90AA1 as key regulators, and suggests potential therapeutic targets for comorbidities.
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