On February 23, 2021, Dr Francis Collins, director of the National Institute of Health (NIH) of the USA, announced that a major study was being launched “to identify the causes and ultimately the means of prevention and treatment of individuals who have been sickened by Covid-19, but don’t recover fully over a period of a few weeks”. He elaborated that “large numbers of patients ...continue to experience a constellation of symptoms....often referred to as ‘Long Covid’, [that] can persist for months and can range from mild to incapacitating”. Coming at a time when several variants of the original pathogen are spreading, and a new surge of cases indicates that India is heading straight for a ‘second wave’, the sombre words of the scientist reflect the grim nature of the long struggle ahead. Of course, while fresh science will continue to illuminate our battle, studies over the last year have already provided some answers as to why Covid-19’s arsenal is far more dangerous than those of ‘regular’ flu and cold and how co-morbidities and environmental hazards aggravate its dangers.
Connecting the observations
1. It is common knowledge by now that the novel coronavirus, technically named SARS-CoV-2, enters our cells using one of our own proteins: Angiotensin Converting Enzyme 2 (ACE2). The Spike protein of the virus is a ‘key’ that snugly fits onto the ‘lock-like’ ACE2 that projects out from the membrane of cells of the nasopharynx, trachea, bronchi and the lungs. This kickstarts a process that produces many progeny viruses inside the infected cell and spreads the pathogen to a widening circle of neighbouring tissues, resulting in disease. Of course, the physiological function of ACE2 is not to facilitate the entry of the virus. So what is the function of ACE2 ? How is it related to the thousands of deaths in this pandemic?
2. Worldwide, it is clear that Covid-19 is not a mere respiratory disease. Although its primary attack is on the airways and lungs, undeniable evidence now points towards a correlation between Covid-19 and cardiovascular diseases. Pre-existing co-morbidities like hypertension (i.e. chronically high blood pressure), coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy (i.e. damage to heart muscles) and atrial fibrillation can badly increase the severity of Covid-19. The infection has been shown to trigger myocardial injury, cardiac arrhythmia, acute heart failure and thromboembolism (i.e. clots within blood vessels) in many patients. Similarly, diabetes mellitus is a critical co-morbidity that could badly affect a patient and acute kidney injury is not uncommon. Question is: how is the virus attacking non-respiratory organs?
3. The alarming effect of air pollution. Italy was one of the first nations that was ravaged by the pandemic. Now, epidemiological studies have clearly shown that it was the highly polluted cities in the Po valley and Lombardia region of northern Italy that had the highest number of Covid-19 fatalities, correlating high levels of air pollutants like PM2.5 and NO2 to the severity of the disease. Another major study compiled data from >3,000 counties in the US and concluded, “an increase of 1 ðÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂg/m3 in long-term average PM2.5 is associated with a statistically significant 11% increase in the county’s Covid-19 mortality rate”. But how do the pollutants help the virus to overwhelm the body’s defences? Importantly, are all the above observations interconnected by fundamental physiological mechanisms?
The actual function of ACE2