City
Epaper

Study explains fluctuation in blood oxygenation levels in COVID-19 patients

By ANI | Updated: January 2, 2021 12:20 IST

A study published in the journal sheds light on the explanation for the lack of blood oxygenation detected in many COVID-19 patients.

Open in App

A study published in the journal sheds light on the explanation for the lack of blood oxygenation detected in many COVID-19 patients.

The mysterious physiopathological characteristics of COVID-19 that has most baffled the scientific and medical community is what is known as 'silent hypoxemia' or 'happy hypoxia'.

Patients suffering this phenomenon, the causes of which are still unknown, have severe pneumonia with markedly decreased arterial blood oxygen levels (known as hypoxemia). However, they do not report dyspnea (subjective feeling of shortness of breath) or increased breathing rates, which are usually characteristic symptoms of people with hypoxemia from pneumonia or any other cause.

Patients with 'silent hypoxemia' often suffer a sudden imbalance, reaching a critical state that can be fatal. Normally, individuals (healthy or sick) with hypoxemia report a feeling of shortness of breath and a higher breathing rate, thus increasing the body's uptake of oxygen. This reflex mechsm depends on the carotid bodies. These small organs, located on either side of the neck next to the carotid artery, detect the drop in blood oxygen and send signals to the brain to stimulate the respiratory centre.

A group of researchers from the Seville Institute of Biomedicine - IBiS/University Hospitals Virgen del Rocio y Macarena/CSIC/the University of Seville, led by Dr Javier Villadiego, Dr Juan Jose Toledo-Aral and Dr Jose Lopez-Barneo, specialists in the physiopathological study of the carotid body, have suggested in the journal Function, that "silent hypoxemia" in COVID-19 cases could be caused by this organ being infected by the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2).

This hypothesis, which has attracted the interest of the scientific community for its novelty and possible therapeutic significance, comes from experiments that have revealed a high presence of the enzyme ECA2, the protein the coronavirus uses to infect human cells, in the carotid body.

In patients with COVID-19, the coronavirus circulates in the blood. Therefore, researchers suggest that infection of the human carotid body by SARS-CoV-2 in the early stages of the disease could alter its ability to detect blood-oxygen levels, resulting in an inability to "notice" the drop in oxygen in the arteries. If this hypothesis, which is currently being tested in new experimental models, is confirmed, this would justify the use of activators of the carotid body independent of the oxygen sensing mechsm as respiratory stimulants in patients with COVID-19.

( With inputs from ANI )

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

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketMI Playoff Qualification Scenarios EXPLAINED: Can Mumbai Indians Still Qualify for IPL 2025 Playoffs After Loss to Gujarat Titans?

Other SportsIPL 2025: Gujarat Titans end Mumbai Indians' win streak in rain-marred thriller

InternationalUS briefing condemns Pakistan's proxy war against Hindus, urges policy action

CricketIPL: Gujarat Titans beat Mumbai Indians by 3 wickets via DLS in rain-hit match at Wankhede

CricketMI vs GT, IPL 2025: Gujarat Titans Beat Mumbai Indians in Rain-Hit Thriller at Wankhede

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia at the forefront of global energy transition: Piyush Goyal

TechnologyIndia’s 1st human spaceflight scheduled for first quarter of 2027: Minister

TechnologyPaytm Q4 revenue falls 15.7 pc, net loss widens to Rs 544.6 crore QoQ

TechnologyHPCL clocks 18 pc jump in Q4 net profit at Rs 3,355 crore, declares Rs 10.50 dividend

TechnologyGAIL hikes startup investment fund to Rs 500 crore in FY25: Hardeep Puri