AlTaweel Muneera, Almusaad Abdulmohsen, Alkhazmari Gousay, Alrowaily Hussain, Alsubaiee Maram, Husain Mareyah Alshaikh, Alomayrin Nouf, Almuaiweed Rafyel, Aleid Norah, Alarfaj Abdulrahman A, Albahrani Zainab, Taleb Yaqob, Jalbani Aftab A, Almukhaylid Sarah, Soliman Ayman, Iqbal Zafar
Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs (Saudi Arabia), Saudi Arabia.
King Abdullah International Medical Research Center (KAIMRC), Saudi Arabia.
Arch Microbiol Immunol. 2024;8(3):290-308. doi: 10.26502/ami.936500177. Epub 2024 Jul 19.
COVID-19 was initially identified as a respiratory system disorder, but it has been reported to interact with and influence the cardiovascular system, in addition to many other body systems. Although COVID-19-associated cardiovascular (CV) complications are common, resulting in high acute phase mortality and a large number of morbidities in the chronic phase, thus severely impacting patients' quality of life and health outcomes, yet clinical, cellular, and molecular biological factors underlying the pathophysiology of cardiovascular complications associated with COVID-19 are poorly understood. This review investigates putative underlying clinical factors as well as cellular and molecular biological mechanisms by which COVID-19 leads to acute CV complications, including state-of-the-art genomic sequencing-based findings, and assessing the long-term CV consequences of COVID-19, aiming to shed light on developing strategies for differential diagnosis, risk prognostic stratification, prevention, and clinical management of CV sequels in COVID-19 patients. We found that the relationship between COVID-19 and CV risk is complex and multifaceted. Intriguingly, in addition to acute COVID-19 detertriuos effects, COVID-19 survivors may experience long-term CV effects as well that may have long-lasting clinical consequences. Here in this article, we provide a detailed account of a large number of genomic alterations, microRNAs, and novel viral as well as host proteins in CVDs associated with COVID-19, which has helped identify some novel drug targets to treat COVID-19-related cardiovascular complications.
COVID-19最初被确定为一种呼吸系统疾病,但据报道,除了许多其他身体系统外,它还会与心血管系统相互作用并产生影响。尽管与COVID-19相关的心血管(CV)并发症很常见,导致急性期死亡率高,慢性期出现大量发病情况,从而严重影响患者的生活质量和健康结局,但对于与COVID-19相关的心血管并发症病理生理学背后的临床、细胞和分子生物学因素,人们了解甚少。本综述调查了COVID-19导致急性CV并发症的潜在临床因素以及细胞和分子生物学机制,包括基于最新基因组测序的发现,并评估COVID-19的长期CV后果,旨在为制定COVID-19患者CV后遗症的鉴别诊断、风险预后分层、预防和临床管理策略提供线索。我们发现,COVID-19与CV风险之间的关系是复杂且多方面的。有趣的是,除了急性COVID-19的有害影响外,COVID-19幸存者也可能经历长期的CV影响,这可能会产生长期的临床后果。在本文中,我们详细介绍了与COVID-19相关的心血管疾病中的大量基因组改变、微小RNA、新型病毒以及宿主蛋白,这有助于确定一些治疗COVID-19相关心血管并发症的新型药物靶点。