Endothelial damage represents an essential pathogenic mechanism of respiratory and multiorgan dysfunction as seen in the post-acute phase of COVID-19. Biological differences between male and female sex, inflammation, and gut integrity may have an integral role in endothelial damage and explain the residual effects of COVID-19 infection in long COVID, yet evidence is limited. Confirmed COVID-19 negative participants were 1:1 propensity-score matched to COVID-19 positive participants. Symptoms occurring at least one-month following COVID-infection and lasting more than three-months was defined as long COVID. Measures of endothelial function included reactive hyperemic index (RHIââ¥â1.67â=ânormal endothelial function) and augmentation index (higher AIxâ=âworse arterial elasticity). A total of 89 COVID-19 negative participants was matched to 89 COVID-19 positive participants. Among the COVID-19 survivors, the median age was 42.92 years, 46.07% were female sex, and 57 (64%) had long COVID. Higher levels of inflammation (TNF-RI and oxLDL) and gut integrity (zonulin and BDG) was associated (Pâ<â0.05) with a two-fold increase in the odds of long COVID. Female sex, independent of COVID-19 status, was 4x more likely to have worse AIx (Pâ<â0.0001) compared to male sex. Among female sex with long COVID, higher levels of inflammation (IL-6, VCAM, hsCRP) and gut integrity (zonulin) was independently associated (Pâ<â0.05) with higher AIx. Female sex with long COVID symptoms had the worse inflammation, gut integrity, and arterial stiffness among COVID-19 survivors. This reinforces the importance of continued, long-term follow-up care following COVID-19 infection, with special attention needed for female sex who may be at a higher cardiovascular disease risk.
Sex differences in inflammation and markers of gut integrity in long COVID.
新冠后遗症患者的炎症和肠道完整性指标存在性别差异
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作者:Durieux Jared C, Koberssy Ziad, Daher Joviane, Baissary Jhony, Abboud Marc, Atieh Ornina, Woolverton Christopher, McComsey Grace A
| 期刊: | Scientific Reports | 影响因子: | 3.900 |
| 时间: | 2025 | 起止号: | 2025 Jul 28; 15(1):27374 |
| doi: | 10.1038/s41598-025-11470-4 | 研究方向: | 炎症/感染 |
| 疾病类型: | 新冠 | ||
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