COVID-19 后嗅觉系统的病毒后效应及其意义。
Post-viral effects of COVID-19 in the olfactory system and their implications.
机构信息
Human Performance Wing, Air Force Research Lab, US Department of Defense, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, OH, USA.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
出版信息
Lancet Neurol. 2021 Sep;20(9):753-761. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(21)00182-4. Epub 2021 Jul 30.
BACKGROUND
The mechanisms by which any upper respiratory virus, including SARS-CoV-2, impairs chemosensory function are not known. COVID-19 is frequently associated with olfactory dysfunction after viral infection, which provides a research opportunity to evaluate the natural course of this neurological finding. Clinical trials and prospective and histological studies of new-onset post-viral olfactory dysfunction have been limited by small sample sizes and a paucity of advanced neuroimaging data and neuropathological samples. Although data from neuropathological specimens are now available, neuroimaging of the olfactory system during the acute phase of infection is still rare due to infection control concerns and critical illness and represents a substantial gap in knowledge.
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
The active replication of SARS-CoV-2 within the brain parenchyma (ie, in neurons and glia) has not been proven. Nevertheless, post-viral olfactory dysfunction can be viewed as a focal neurological deficit in patients with COVID-19. Evidence is also sparse for a direct causal relation between SARS-CoV-2 infection and abnormal brain findings at autopsy, and for trans-synaptic spread of the virus from the olfactory epithelium to the olfactory bulb. Taken together, clinical, radiological, histological, ultrastructural, and molecular data implicate inflammation, with or without infection, in either the olfactory epithelium, the olfactory bulb, or both. This inflammation leads to persistent olfactory deficits in a subset of people who have recovered from COVID-19. Neuroimaging has revealed localised inflammation in intracranial olfactory structures. To date, histopathological, ultrastructural, and molecular evidence does not suggest that SARS-CoV-2 is an obligate neuropathogen. WHERE NEXT?: The prevalence of CNS and olfactory bulb pathosis in patients with COVID-19 is not known. We postulate that, in people who have recovered from COVID-19, a chronic, recrudescent, or permanent olfactory deficit could be prognostic for an increased likelihood of neurological sequelae or neurodegenerative disorders in the long term. An inflammatory stimulus from the nasal olfactory epithelium to the olfactory bulbs and connected brain regions might accelerate pathological processes and symptomatic progression of neurodegenerative disease. Persistent olfactory impairment with or without perceptual distortions (ie, parosmias or phantosmias) after SARS-CoV-2 infection could, therefore, serve as a marker to identify people with an increased long-term risk of neurological disease.
背景
目前尚不清楚包括 SARS-CoV-2 在内的任何呼吸道病毒是如何损害化学感觉功能的。COVID-19 病毒感染后常伴有嗅觉功能障碍,这为评估这一神经发现的自然病程提供了研究机会。由于样本量小、缺乏先进的神经影像学数据和神经病理学样本,临床试验以及新发性病毒后嗅觉功能障碍的前瞻性和组织学研究受到限制。尽管现在有神经病理学标本的数据,但由于感染控制问题和危重病,在感染急性期对嗅觉系统进行神经影像学检查仍然很少见,这是知识上的一个重大空白。
最新进展
SARS-CoV-2 在脑实质(即神经元和神经胶质细胞)内的主动复制尚未得到证实。然而,COVID-19 患者的病毒后嗅觉功能障碍可以被视为局灶性神经缺损。SARS-CoV-2 感染与尸检时异常大脑发现之间也缺乏直接因果关系的证据,以及病毒从嗅上皮到嗅球的跨突触传播。总之,临床、放射学、组织学、超微结构和分子数据表明,炎症(无论是否存在感染)都可能导致嗅觉上皮或嗅球或两者均存在持续性嗅觉缺陷。在从 COVID-19 中康复的人群中,这种炎症导致了一部分人的持续性嗅觉缺陷。神经影像学显示颅内嗅觉结构存在局部炎症。迄今为止,组织病理学、超微结构和分子证据表明 SARS-CoV-2 不是必需的神经病原体。
下一步是什么?COVID-19 患者中枢神经系统和嗅球病变的患病率尚不清楚。我们推测,在从 COVID-19 中康复的人群中,慢性、复发性或永久性嗅觉缺陷可能预示着长期存在神经后遗症或神经退行性疾病的可能性增加。来自鼻嗅上皮的炎症刺激到嗅球和连接的大脑区域可能会加速神经退行性疾病的病理过程和症状进展。因此,SARS-CoV-2 感染后出现持续性嗅觉障碍,伴有或不伴有知觉扭曲(即嗅觉倒错或幻觉),可能成为识别具有长期神经疾病高风险人群的标志物。