Deciphering Alveolo-Capillary Gas Transfer Disturbances in Patients Recovering from COVID-19 Lung Disease, 2024, Hua-Huy et al.

SNT Gatchaman

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Deciphering Alveolo-Capillary Gas Transfer Disturbances in Patients Recovering from COVID-19 Lung Disease
Hua-Huy, Thông; Pham-Ngoc, Hà; Aubourg, Frédérique; Lorut, Christine; Roche, Nicolas; Dinh-Xuan, Anh Tuan

Impaired lung gas exchange is commonly seen in patients with pulmonary involvement related to SARS-CoV-2 acute infection or post-acute COVID-19 syndrome (PACS). The primary aim of our study was to assess lung gas transfer, measuring the pulmonary diffusion capacity for nitric oxide (DLNO) and carbon monoxide (DLCO) in all COVID-19 patients. Our secondary aim was to decipher the respective roles of perturbed lung membrane conductance (DM) and reduced pulmonary capillary volume (VC) in patients with impaired lung gas exchange.

From May to October 2020, we measured DLNO-DLCO in 118 patients during their post-COVID-19 period (4.6 months after infection) to decipher alveolo-capillary gas transfer disturbances. DLNO-DLCO measurement was also performed in 28 healthy non-smokers as controls. Patients were classified into three groups according to the severity (mild, moderate, and severe) of acute COVID-19 infection.

Patients with mild COVID-19 had normal lung volumes and airways expiratory flows but impaired pulmonary gas exchange, as shown by the significant decreases in DLNO, DLCO, DM, and VC as compared with controls. VC was significantly impaired and the DLNO/DLCO ratio was increased in patients with moderate (n = 4, 11%) and severe COVID-19 (n = 23, 49%). Abnormal membrane conductance was also seen in all three groups of post-COVID-19 patients.

These findings suggest a persistent alveolo-capillary gas transfer defect, implying not only reduced membrane conductance but also abnormal pulmonary vascular capacitance in all PACS patients, even those with a milder form of COVID-19 infection.

Link | PDF (Journal of Personalized Medicine) [Open Access]
 
Conclusion said:
Our study confirmed that lung gas transfer impairment is present in all COVID-19 patients, even in the mildest form of the disease when the alveolar volume is still normal. The pulmonary capillary volume (VC) is the most affected parameter, with severe impairment starting in patients with moderately (but not severely) impaired lung volumes. An alteration of VC, as an early and sensitive marker of altered lung gas exchange, suggests a pivotal role of vascular abnormality in COVID-19 and post-COVID-19 lung disease.
 
Interesting stuff. Looking at tags, there seem to be a few papers that have found the same sort of thing, but it doesn't come up much in general discussions of Long Covid.
 
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