Rios Carmen I, Cassatt David R, Hollingsworth Brynn A, Satyamitra Merriline M, Tadesse Yeabsera S, Taliaferro Lanyn P, Winters Thomas A, DiCarlo Andrea L
Radiation and Nuclear Countermeasures Program (RNCP), Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation (DAIT), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Rockville, Maryland.
Radiat Res. 2021 Jan 1;195(1):1-24. doi: 10.1667/RADE-20-00188.1.
As the multi-systemic components of COVID-19 emerge, parallel etiologies can be drawn between SARS-CoV-2 infection and radiation injuries. While some SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals present as asymptomatic, others exhibit mild symptoms that may include fever, cough, chills, and unusual symptoms like loss of taste and smell and reddening in the extremities (e.g., "COVID toes," suggestive of microvessel damage). Still others alarm healthcare providers with extreme and rapid onset of high-risk indicators of mortality that include acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), multi-organ hypercoagulation, hypoxia and cardiovascular damage. Researchers are quickly refocusing their science to address this enigmatic virus that seems to unveil itself in new ways without discrimination. As investigators begin to identify early markers of disease, identification of common threads with other pathologies may provide some clues. Interestingly, years of research in the field of radiation biology documents the complex multiorgan nature of another disease state that occurs after exposure to high doses of radiation: the acute radiation syndrome (ARS). Inflammation is a key common player in COVID-19 and ARS, and drives the multi-system damage that dramatically alters biological homeostasis. Both conditions initiate a cytokine storm, with similar pro-inflammatory molecules increased and other anti-inflammatory molecules decreased. These changes manifest in a variety of ways, with a demonstrably higher health impact in patients having underlying medical conditions. The potentially dramatic human impact of ARS has guided the science that has identified many biomarkers of radiation exposure, established medical management strategies for ARS, and led to the development of medical countermeasures for use in the event of a radiation public health emergency. These efforts can now be leveraged to help elucidate mechanisms of action of COVID-19 injuries. Furthermore, this intersection between COVID-19 and ARS may point to approaches that could accelerate the discovery of treatments for both.
随着新冠病毒多系统症状的出现,可在严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)感染与辐射损伤之间找到相似的病因。虽然一些感染SARS-CoV-2的人没有症状,但其他人会出现轻微症状,可能包括发热、咳嗽、寒战,以及味觉和嗅觉丧失、四肢发红等异常症状(如“新冠脚趾”,提示微血管损伤)。还有一些人则会出现急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)、多器官高凝、缺氧和心血管损伤等高风险死亡指标,且发病迅速,令医护人员警觉。研究人员迅速将科学研究重点重新聚焦于应对这种神秘的病毒,它似乎在毫无差别地以新方式展现自身。随着研究人员开始识别疾病的早期标志物,找出与其他病症的共同线索可能会提供一些线索。有趣的是,辐射生物学领域多年的研究记录了另一种在高剂量辐射暴露后出现的疾病状态的复杂多器官性质:急性辐射综合征(ARS)。炎症是新冠病毒感染和急性辐射综合征的关键共同因素,并引发多系统损伤,极大地改变生物体内稳态。两种情况都会引发细胞因子风暴,促炎分子增加,抗炎分子减少。这些变化以多种方式表现出来,对有基础疾病的患者健康影响明显更大。急性辐射综合征可能产生的巨大人类影响推动了相关科学研究,确定了许多辐射暴露的生物标志物,制定了急性辐射综合征的医疗管理策略,并促成了在辐射公共卫生紧急情况下使用的医疗对策的开发。现在可以利用这些成果来帮助阐明新冠病毒感染损伤的作用机制。此外,新冠病毒感染与急性辐射综合征之间的这种交叉可能指向能够加速这两种疾病治疗方法发现的途径。