COVID-19 infection and body weight: A deleterious liaison in a J-curve relationship - 25/11/21
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Highlights |
• | Overweight and obesity increase risk in COVID-19 patients by reducing cardiorespiratory reserve and enhancing immune dysregulation. |
• | Visceral obesity promotes proinflammatory, prothrombotic, and vasoconstrictive states. |
• | Less, but robust, evidence exists for higher risk of COVID-19 incurred by underweight. |
• | COVID-19 and BMI have a J-relationship, over- and under-weight being more susceptible. |
• | The pathophysiology underlying this link between BMI and COVID-19 is multifactorial. |
Abstract |
During the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, obesity has been shown to be an independent risk factor for high morbidity and mortality. Obesity confers poor outcomes in younger (<60 years) patients, an age-group considered low-risk for complications, a privilege that is negated by obesity. Findings are consistent, the higher the body mass index (BMI) the worse the outcomes. Ectopic (visceral) obesity also promotes proinflammatory, prothrombotic, and vasoconstrictive states, thus enhancing the deleterious effects of COVID-19 disease. Less, albeit robust, evidence also exists for a higher risk of COVID-19 infection incurred with underweight. Thus, the relationship of COVID-19 and BMI has a J-curve pattern, where patients with both overweight/obesity and underweight are more susceptible to the ailments of COVID-19. The pathophysiology underlying this link is multifactorial, mostly relating to the inflammatory state characterizing obesity, the impaired immune response to infectious agents coupled with increased viral load, the overexpression in adipose tissue of the receptors and proteases for viral entry, an increased sympathetic activity, limited cardiorespiratory reserve, a prothrombotic milieu, and the associated comorbidities. All these issues are herein reviewed, the results of large studies and meta-analyses are tabulated and the pathogenetic mechanisms and the BMI relationship with COVID-19 are pictorially illustrated.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : ARDS, BMI, COPD, COVID-19, CVD, DPP4, GDP, ICU, IL, IMV, SNS, TNF, VAT
Keywords : COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, Acute respiratory distress syndrome, Viral pneumonia, Obesity, Overweight, Underweight, Body mass index, Visceral adipose tissue
Plan
Vol 15 - N° 6
P. 523-535 - novembre 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.