[HTML][HTML] A metabolic handbook for the COVID-19 pandemic

JS Ayres - Nature metabolism, 2020 - nature.com
JS Ayres
Nature metabolism, 2020nature.com
For infectious-disease outbreaks, clinical solutions typically focus on efficient pathogen
destruction. However, the COVID-19 pandemic provides a reminder that infectious diseases
are complex, multisystem conditions, and a holistic understanding will be necessary to
maximize survival. For COVID-19 and all other infectious diseases, metabolic processes are
intimately connected to the mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and the resulting
pathology and pathophysiology, as well as the host defence response to the infection. Here …
Abstract
For infectious-disease outbreaks, clinical solutions typically focus on efficient pathogen destruction. However, the COVID-19 pandemic provides a reminder that infectious diseases are complex, multisystem conditions, and a holistic understanding will be necessary to maximize survival. For COVID-19 and all other infectious diseases, metabolic processes are intimately connected to the mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and the resulting pathology and pathophysiology, as well as the host defence response to the infection. Here, I examine the relationship between metabolism and COVID-19. I discuss why preexisting metabolic abnormalities, such as type 2 diabetes and hypertension, may be important risk factors for severe and critical cases of infection, highlighting parallels between the pathophysiology of these metabolic abnormalities and the disease course of COVID-19. I also discuss how metabolism at the cellular, tissue and organ levels might be harnessed to promote defence against the infection, with a focus on disease-tolerance mechanisms, and speculate on the long-term metabolic consequences for survivors of COVID-19.
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