Epstein-Barr may play a role in some long COVID; coronavirus can impair
blood sugar processing by organs
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[June 28, 2022]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a summary of
some recent studies on COVID-19. They include research that warrants
further study to corroborate the findings and that has yet to be
certified by peer review.
Epstein-Barr virus may play role in some long COVID cases
COVID-19 may reactivate a common virus that lurks unseen in most people,
and that effect might increase patients' risk of certain long-lasting
symptoms, according to preliminary findings from a study. More than 90%
of adults have been infected with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Most
remained asymptomatic, but some developed mononucleosis as adolescents
or young adults.
Among 280 patients with SARS-CoV-2 infections, including 208 with long
COVID, researchers found that at four months after diagnosis, fatigue
and problems with thinking and reasoning were more common in study
participants with immune cells in their blood showing signs of recent
EBV reactivation. These signs of reactivation were not linked with other
long COVID findings such as gastrointestinal or heart and lung problems,
however. And EBV itself was not found in patients' blood, which suggests
any reactivation likely is transient and happens during acute COVID-19,
Dr. Timothy Henrich of the University of California, San Francisco and
colleagues reported on medRxiv ahead of peer review.
The findings do not prove that EBV reactivation caused patients'
symptoms, Henrich said. And even if it did, "There are likely many other
causes of long COVID symptoms such as persistent SARS-CoV-2 virus in
tissues over time and a dysregulated immune system that may arise from
viral persistence," he said. "Further study of various tissues is
urgently needed, as are studies that follow participants from the time
of acute infection to months or years thereafter."
SARS-CoV-2 can impair blood sugar processing by organs
Infection with the coronavirus impairs the activity of multiple genes
involved in the body's chemical processes, including blood sugar
metabolism, and for the first time researchers have seen these effects
not just in patients' respiratory tract but elsewhere in the body.
Japanese researchers analyzed blood and tissue samples from patients
with mild or severe COVID-19 and from healthy volunteers, evaluating the
"expression" - or activity levels - of genes that control the so-called
insulin/IGF signaling pathway, which in turn affects many body functions
necessary for metabolism, growth, and fertility. "The results were
striking," study leader Iichiro Shimomura of Osaka University said in a
statement. "Infection with SARS-CoV-2 affected the expression of
insulin/IGF signaling pathway components in the lung, liver, adipose
tissue, and pancreatic cells." The resulting disruptions in blood sugar
metabolism likely contribute to COVID-19's effects on organs, the
researchers said.
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People queue for COVID-19 testing in Macau, China, June 20, 2022.
REUTERS/John Mak
The changes, which they attribute in part to the
immune system's inflammatory response to the virus, were more
pronounced in patients with severe COVID-19, they reported in the
journal Metabolism - which is known to benefit hospitalized patients
with COVID-19 - helped relieve the adverse effects of the virus on
the genes.
The new findings might be a clue to why some patients develop
metabolic complications during or after COVID-19, such as insulin
resistance, hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, and new onset of
diabetes, the researchers said.
New data support 5 days of isolation plus 5 days of masking
A new study supports current guidelines that call for a five-day
isolation period for COVID-19 infections followed by five days of
strict masking to help prevent transmission from cases that remain
culture positive, researchers said.
Boston University School of Medicine researchers collected daily
nasal swabs for at least 10 days from 92 vaccinated college students
and staff infected with the Delta or Omicron variants of the
coronavirus for analysis with PCR and with the kind of rapid-antigen
tests that are available for home use. Among these young and
otherwise healthy adults, only 17% still tested positive after five
days, and no one was infectious beyond 12 days after symptom onset,
the researchers reported in Clinical Infectious Diseases. The
results were similar regardless of variant or vaccine booster
status, and negative rapid antigen tests were very reliable,
according to the report.
While rapid antigen testing "may provide reassurance of lack of
infectiousness... a full 10 days is necessary to prevent
transmission from the 17 percent of individuals who remain culture
positive after isolation," study leader Dr. Tara Bouton said in a
statement.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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