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Tachykinins and the potential causal factors for post-COVID-19 condition

Sok‐Ja Janket, Douglas D. Fraser, Alison E. Baird, Faleh Tamimi, Dorsa Sohaei, Harry A. Conte, Ioannis Prassas, Eleftherios P. Diamandis

2023The Lancet Microbe14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The most prevalent symptoms of post-COVID-19 condition are pulmonary dysfunction, fatigue and muscle weakness, anxiety, anosmia, dysgeusia, headaches, difficulty in concentrating, sexual dysfunction, and digestive disturbances. Hence, neurological dysfunction and autonomic impairments predominate in post-COVID-19 condition. Tachykinins including the most studied substance P are neuropeptides expressed throughout the nervous and immune systems, and contribute to many physiopathological processes in the nervous, immune, gastrointestinal, respiratory, urogenital, and dermal systems and participate in inflammation, nociception, and cell proliferation. Substance P is a key molecule in neuroimmune crosstalk; immune cells near the peripheral nerve endings can send signals to the brain with cytokines, which highlights the important role of tachykinins in neuroimmune communication. We reviewed the evidence that relates the symptoms of post-COVID-19 condition to the functions of tachykinins and propose a putative pathogenic mechanism. The antagonism of tachykinins receptors can be a potential treatment target.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemSubstance PMedicineAnosmiaNeuroscienceInflammationImmunologyAutonomic nervous systemNeuropeptideReceptorPsychologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Internal medicineDiseaseBlood pressureHeart rateInfectious disease (medical specialty)Cancer, Stress, Anesthesia, and Immune ResponsePharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and EffectsNeuropeptides and Animal Physiology
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