COVID-19 in Children: Molecular Profile and Pathological Features.

Autor: Nasyrov RA; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Ivanov DO; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Krasnogorskaya OL; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Timchenko VN; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Fedotova EP; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Chepelev AS; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Galichina VA; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Sidorova NA; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia., Anichkov NM; The Prof. D.D. Lohov Department of Pathological Anatomy with Course of Forensic Medicine, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University Ministry of Public Health Care of the Russian Federation, St. Litovskaya, 2, 194100 St. Petersburg, Russia.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: International journal of molecular sciences [Int J Mol Sci] 2023 Nov 25; Vol. 24 (23). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 25.
DOI: 10.3390/ijms242316750
Abstrakt: Although the World Health Organization has declared the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, doctors continue to register new cases of the disease among both adults and children. Unfortunately, the course of COVID-19 in children can have a severe form, with death being a potential outcome. The absence of published works discussing the pathological morphology of COVID-19 in children prevents the objective analysis of the disease's pathogenesis, including among the adult population. In this vein, the objective of our study is to identify the morphological features of the lungs' involvement and evaluate virus-host interactions in the case of COVID-19 in patients at a pediatric medical practice. We present the results of the study of the lungs of three children who died due to COVID-19, highlighting the predominant involvement of their respiratory organs at different stages of the disease (5, 21, and 50 days). This article presents data obtained from histopathological and immunohistochemical investigations, taking into account the results of clinical and laboratory indicators and intravital and postmortem SARS-CoV-2 PCR investigations. The common finding of all of the examined COVID-19 cases is the involvement of the endothelium in microcirculation vessels, which are considered to be a primary target of various pathogenic influencing factors. We also discuss both the significance of apoptosis as a result of virus-host interactions and the most likely cause of endothelium cell destruction. The results of this study could be useful for the development of endothelium-protective therapy to prevent the progression of disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome.
Databáze: MEDLINE
Nepřihlášeným uživatelům se plný text nezobrazuje