In the present study, we provide evidence on the potential mechanisms involved in the residual pulmonary impairment described in long COVID syndrome. Data highlight that lung damage is significantly associated with a proinflammatory platelet phenotype, characterized mainly by the formation of platelet-leukocyte aggregates. In ex vivo experiments, long COVID plasma reproduces the platelet activation observed in vivo and highlights low-grade inflammation as a potential underpinning mechanism, exploiting a synergistic activity between C-reactive protein and subthreshold concentrations of interleukin-6. The platelet-activated phenotype is blunted by anti-inflammatory and antiplatelet drugs, suggesting a potential therapeutic option in this clinical setting.

Low-Grade Inflammation in Long COVID Syndrome Sustains a Persistent Platelet Activation Associated With Lung Impairment

Bozzi, Silvia;Mencarini, Tatiana;
2025-01-01

Abstract

In the present study, we provide evidence on the potential mechanisms involved in the residual pulmonary impairment described in long COVID syndrome. Data highlight that lung damage is significantly associated with a proinflammatory platelet phenotype, characterized mainly by the formation of platelet-leukocyte aggregates. In ex vivo experiments, long COVID plasma reproduces the platelet activation observed in vivo and highlights low-grade inflammation as a potential underpinning mechanism, exploiting a synergistic activity between C-reactive protein and subthreshold concentrations of interleukin-6. The platelet-activated phenotype is blunted by anti-inflammatory and antiplatelet drugs, suggesting a potential therapeutic option in this clinical setting.
2025
antiplatelet drugs
inflammation
long COVID
platelet-leukocyte aggregates
tissue factor
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1285813
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