Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:8698...

Topic
Article
Author
van Eijk, Larissa E. Tami, Adriana Hillebrands, Jan-Luuk den Dunnen, Wilfred F. A. de Borst, Martin H. van der Voort, Peter H. J. Bulthuis, Marian L. C. Veloo, Alida C. M. Wold, Karin I. Vincenti González, María F. van der Gun, Bernardina T. F. van Goor, Harry Bourgonje, Arno R.
Langue
en
Editor

MDPI

Category

Antioxidants

Year

2021

listing date

10/21/2023

Keywords
non-hospitalized systemic study thiol healthy controls 0 subjects covid-19 serum free
Metrics

Abstract

Oxidative stress has been implicated to play a critical role in the pathophysiology of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and may therefore be considered as a relevant therapeutic target.

Serum free thiols (R-SH, sulfhydryl groups) comprise a robust marker of systemic oxidative stress, since they are readily oxidized by reactive oxygen species (ROS).

In this study, serum free thiol concentrations were measured in hospitalized and non-hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and healthy controls and their associations with relevant clinical parameters were examined.

Serum free thiol concentrations were measured colorimetrically (Ellman’s method) in 29 non-hospitalized COVID-19 subjects and 30 age-, sex-, and body-mass index (BMI)-matched healthy controls and analyzed for associations with clinical and biochemical disease parameters.

Additional free thiol measurements were performed on seven serum samples from COVID-19 subjects who required hospitalization to examine their correlation with disease severity.

Non-hospitalized subjects with COVID-19 had significantly lower concentrations of serum free thiols compared to healthy controls (p = 0.014), indicating oxidative stress.

Serum free thiols were positively associated with albumin (St. β = 0.710, p < 0.001) and inversely associated with CRP (St. β = −0.434, p = 0.027), and showed significant discriminative ability to differentiate subjects with COVID-19 from healthy controls (AUC = 0.69, p = 0.011), which was slightly higher than the discriminative performance of CRP concentrations regarding COVID-19 diagnosis (AUC = 0.66, p = 0.042).

This study concludes that systemic oxidative stress is increased in patients with COVID-19 compared with healthy controls.

This opens an avenue of treatment options since free thiols are amenable to therapeutic modulation.

van Eijk, Larissa E.,Tami, Adriana,Hillebrands, Jan-Luuk,den Dunnen, Wilfred F. A.,de Borst, Martin H.,van der Voort, Peter H. J.,Bulthuis, Marian L. C.,Veloo, Alida C. M.,Wold, Karin I.,Vincenti González, María F.,van der Gun, Bernardina T. F.,van Goor, Harry,Bourgonje, Arno R., 2021, Mild Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Is Marked by Systemic Oxidative Stress: A Pilot Study, MDPI

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