By Will Stone NOVEMBER
13, 2020
Whether it’s strange
rashes on the toes or blood clots in the brain, the widespread ravages of
COVID-19 have increasingly led researchers to focus on how the novel
coronavirus sabotages blood vessels.
As scientists have come
to know the disease better, they have homed in on the vascular system — the
body’s network of arteries, veins and capillaries, stretching more than 60,000
miles — to understand this wide-ranging disease and to find treatments that can
stymie its most pernicious effects.
Some of the earliest
insights into how COVID-19 can act like a vascular disease came from studying the aftermath of the most
serious infections. Those reveal that the virus warps a critical piece of our
vascular infrastructure: the single layer of cells lining the inside of every
blood vessel, known as the endothelial cells or simply the endothelium.
Dr. William Li,
a vascular biologist, compares this lining to a freshly resurfaced ice rink
before a hockey game on which the players and pucks glide smoothly along.
“When the virus damages
the inside of the blood vessel and shreds the lining, that’s like the ice after a
hockey game,” said Li, a researcher and founder of the Angiogenesis Foundation.
“You wind up with a situation that is really untenable for blood flow.”
In a study published this summer, Li and an
international team of researchers compared the lung tissues of people who died
of COVID-19 with those of people who died of influenza. They found stark
differences: The lung tissues of the COVID victims had nine times as many tiny
blood clots (“microthrombi”) as those of the influenza victims, and the
coronavirus-infected lungs also exhibited “severe endothelial injury.”
“The surprise was that
this respiratory virus makes a beeline for the cells lining blood vessels,
filling them up like a gumball machine and shredding the cell from the inside
out,” Li said. “We found blood vessels are blocked and blood clots are forming
because of that lining damage.”
It’s already known that
the coronavirus breaks into cells by way of a specific
receptor, called ACE2, which is found all over the body. But
scientists are still trying to understand how the virus sets off a cascade of
events that cause so much destruction to blood vessels. Li said one theory is
that the virus directly attacks endothelial cells. Lab experiments have shown that the coronavirus can
infect engineered human endothelial cells.
It’s also possible the
problems begin elsewhere, and the endothelial cells sustain collateral damage
along the way as the immune system reacts — and sometimes overreacts — to the
invading virus.
Endothelial cells have a
slew of important jobs; these include preventing clotting, controlling blood
pressure, regulating oxidative stress and fending off pathogens. And Li said
uncovering how the virus jeopardizes the endothelium may link many of
COVID-19’s complications: “the effects in the brain, the blood clots in the
lung and elsewhere in the legs, the COVID toe, the problem with the kidneys and
even the heart.”
In Spain, skin biopsies
of distinctive red lesions on toes, known as chilblains, found viral particles
in the endothelial cells, leading the authors to conclude that “endothelial
damage induced by the virus could be the key mechanism.”
Is Blood Vessel Damage
Behind COVID Complications?
With a surface area larger than a football field, the
endothelium helps maintain a delicate balance in the bloodstream. These cells
are essentially the gatekeeper to the bloodstream.
“The endothelium has
developed a distant early warning system to alert the body to get ready for an
invasion if there’s trouble brewing,” said Dr. Peter Libby, a cardiologist and research
scientist at Harvard Medical School. When that happens, endothelial cells
change the way they function, he said. But that process can go too far.
“The very functions that
help us maintain health and fight off invaders, when they run out of control,
then it can actually make the disease worse,” Libby said.
In that case, the
endothelial cells turn against their host and start to promote clotting and
high blood pressure.
“In COVID-19 patients, we
have both of these markers of dysfunction,” said Dr. Gaetano Santulli, a cardiologist and
researcher at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.
The novel coronavirus
triggers a condition seen in other cardiovascular diseases called endothelial dysfunction. Santulli, who wrote about this idea in the spring, said
that may be the “cornerstone” of organ dysfunction in COVID patients.
“The common denominator
in all of these COVID-19 patients is endothelial dysfunction,” he said. “It’s
like the virus knows where to go and knows how to attack these cells.”
Runaway Immune Response
Adds a Plot Twist
A major source of damage
to the vascular system likely also comes from the body’s own runaway immune
response to the coronavirus.
“What we see with the
SARS-CoV-2 is really an unprecedented level of inflammation in the
bloodstream,” said Dr. Yogen Kanthi, a cardiologist and vascular
medicine specialist at the National Institutes of Health who’s researching this
phase of the illness. “This virus is leveraging its ability to create
inflammation, and that has these deleterious, nefarious effects downstream.”
When inflammation spreads
through the inner lining of the blood vessels — a condition called
endothelialitis — blood clots can form throughout the body, starving tissues of
oxygen and promoting even more inflammation.
“We start to get this
relentless, self-amplifying cycle of inflammation in the body, which can then
lead to more clotting and more inflammation,” Kanthi said.
Another sign of
endothelial damage comes from analyzing the blood of COVID patients. A recent
study found elevated levels of a protein produced by endothelial cells, called
von Willebrand factor, that is involved in clotting.
“They are through the
roof in those who are critically ill,” said Dr. Alfred Lee, a hematologist at
the Yale Cancer Center who coauthored the study with Hyung Chun, a cardiologist and
vascular biologist at Yale.
Lee pointed out that some
autoimmune diseases can lead to a similar interplay of clotting and
inflammation called immunothrombosis.
Chun said the elevated
levels of von Willebrand factor show that vascular injury can be detected in
patients while in the hospital — and perhaps even before, which could help
predict their likelihood of developing more serious complications.
But he said it’s not yet
clear what is the driving force behind the blood vessel damage: “It does seem
to be a progression of disease that really brings out this endothelial injury.
The key question is, what’s the root cause of this?”
After they presented
their data, Lee said, Yale’s hospital system started putting patients who were
critically ill with COVID-19 on aspirin, which can prevent clotting. While the
best combinations and dosages are still being studied, research indicates blood thinners may
improve outcomes in COVID patients.
Chun said treatments are
also being studied that may more directly protect endothelial cells from the
coronavirus.
“Is that the
end-all-be-all to treating COVID-19? I absolutely don’t think so. There’s so
many aspects of the disease that we still don’t understand,” he said.
COVID Is Often a Vascular
‘Stress Test’
Early in the pandemic,
Dr. Roger Seheult, a critical care and pulmonary
physician in Southern California, realized the patients he expected to be most
vulnerable to a respiratory virus, those with underlying lung conditions such
as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma, were not the ones ending
up disproportionately in his intensive care unit. Seheult, who runs the popular
medical education website MedCram, said, “Instead, what we are seeing
are patients who are obese, people who have large BMIs, people who have Type 2
diabetes and with high blood pressure.”
Over time, all those
conditions can cause inflammation and damage to the lining of blood vessels, he
said, including a harmful chemical imbalance known as oxidative stress. Seheult said infection with
the coronavirus becomes an added stress for people with those conditions that
already tax the blood vessels: “If you’re right on the edge and you get the
wind blown from this coronavirus, now you’ve gone over the edge.”
He said the extensive
damage to blood vessels could explain why COVID patients with severe
respiratory problems don’t necessarily resemble patients who get sick from the
flu.
“They are having
shortness of breath, but we have to realize the lungs are more than just the
airways,” he said. “It’s an issue with the blood vessels themselves.”
This is why COVID
patients struggle to fill their blood supply with oxygen, even when air is
being pumped into their lungs.
“The endothelial cells
get leaky, so instead of being like saran wrap, it turns into a sieve and then
it allows fluid from the bloodstream to accumulate in the air spaces,”
Harvard’s Libby said.
Doctors who treat
COVID-19 are now keenly aware that complications such as strokes and heart
problems can appear even after a patient gets better and their breathing
improves.
“They are off oxygen,
they can be discharged home, but their vasculature is not completely resolved.
They still have inflammation,” he said. “What can happen is they develop a
blood clot, and they have a massive pulmonary embolism.”
Patients can be closely
monitored for these problems, but one of the big unknowns for doctors and
patients is the long-term effects of COVID-19 on the circulatory system. The
Angiogenesis Foundation’s Li puts it this way: “The virus enters
your body and it leaves your body. You might or might not have gotten sick. But
is that leaving behind a trashed vascular system?”
This story is part of a
partnership that includes NPR and
Kaiser Health News.
https://khn.org/news/clots-strokes-and-rashes-is-covid-a-disease-of-the-blood-vessels/
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