City
Epaper

Here's why kids were better able to fight Covid than adults

By IANS | Updated: August 4, 2022 12:25 IST

Sydney, Aug 4 The lining of children's noses are better at inhibiting SARS-CoV-2 infections than adult noses, a ...

Open in App

Sydney, Aug 4 The lining of children's noses are better at inhibiting SARS-CoV-2 infections than adult noses, a finding that may explain why a majority of kids were able to dodge the infectious virus.

The research, published in PLOS Biology, showed the virus replicated less efficiently in the children's nasal cells, as well as had a heightened antiviral response.

Dr Kirsty Short from the University of Queensland in Australia said it might be one reason why children's immune responses have so far proven more effective at avoiding and fighting Covid-19.

"Children have a lower Covid-19 infection rate and milder symptoms than adults, but the reasons for this have been unknown," said Short from the varsity's School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences.

"We've shown the lining of children's noses has a more pro-inflammatory response to the ancestral SARS-CoV-2 than adult noses," she added.

The team exposed the samples of nasal lining cells from 23 healthy children and 15 healthy adults to SARS-CoV-2.Short said there were a number of theories behind kids' heightened antiviral response.

"It could be an adaptation to the increased threats of 'foreign invaders' such as viruses or bacteria observed in childhood," she said.

"It's also possible that increased exposure to these threats in childhood atrains' the nasal lining in children to mount a stronger pro-inflammatory response."

Or alternatively, metabolic differences between children and adults could alter how virus-fighting genes express themselves.

"Further, the researchers found the Delta Covid-19 variant was significantly less likely to replicate in the nasal cells of children compared to adults. But the trend was markedly less pronounced in the case of Omicron.aceTaken together, it shows children's nasal lining supports lower infection and replication of ancestral SARS-CoV-2, but this may be changing as the virus evolves," Short said.

"Future clinical studies will be needed to validate these preliminary findings in a larger population and to determine the role of other factors, such as antibodies in protecting children from SARS-CoV-2 infection," she noted.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: australiaSydneyUniversity Of QueenslandPlos biologySahil kiniNavy australiaPlos biology journalSahil d gada
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketMitchell Starc Retires: Australian Fast Bowler Announces T20I Exit, Says 'Best Way Forward'

InternationalAustralia Shooting: Two Police Officers Killed, One Injured in Porepunkah; Town on Lockdown

MumbaiMumbai: Police Register Case Against Man for Cyberstalking and Blackmailing 23-Year-Old Student in Australia

MumbaiMumbai Shocker: Fake Account in Mother’s Name Used to Blackmail Young Woman in Australia, Case Registered

Social ViralAustralia: Meteor Lights Up Skies Over Victoria; Residents Describe ‘Sonic Boom’ (Watch)

International Realted Stories

InternationalIraq criticises US sanctions on Iraqi entities as 'regrettable'

InternationalPakistan: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa govt drops no-confidence motion against outgoing CM

InternationalTrump orders Pentagon to pay troops amid govt shutdown

InternationalUN chief to attend Gaza peace summit in Egypt

International"We welcome Anthropic's expansion and look forward to working together": PM Modi on US AI company setting up in India