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- Maximilian Ackermann, Stijn E Verleden, Mark Kuehnel, Axel Haverich, Tobias Welte, Florian Laenger, Arno Vanstapel, Christopher Werlein, Helge Stark, Alexandar Tzankov, William W Li, Vincent W Li, Steven J Mentzer, and Danny Jonigk.
- From the Institute of Pathology and Department of Molecular Pathology, Helios University Clinic Wuppertal, University of Witten-Herdecke, Wuppertal (M.A.), the Institute of Functional and Clinical Anatomy, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Mainz (M.A.), the Institute of Pathology (M.K., F.L., C.W., H.S., D.J.), the Department of Cardiothoracic, Transplantation, and Vascular Surgery (A.H.), and the Clinic of Pneumology (T.W.), Hannover Medical School, and the German Center for Lung Research, Biomedical Research in Endstage and Obstructive Lung Disease Hannover (BREATH) (M.K., A.H., T.W., F.L., C.W., H.S., D.J.), Hannover - all in Germany; the Laboratory of Respiratory Diseases, BREATH, Department of Chronic Diseases, Metabolism, and Aging, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium (S.E.V., A.V.); the Institute of Pathology and Medical Genetics, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland (A.T.); and the Angiogenesis Foundation, Cambridge (W.W.L., V.W.L.), and the Laboratory of Adaptive and Regenerative Biology and the Division of Thoracic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston (S.J.M.) - all in Massachusetts.
- N. Engl. J. Med. 2020 Jul 9; 383 (2): 120128120-128.
BackgroundProgressive respiratory failure is the primary cause of death in the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic. Despite widespread interest in the pathophysiology of the disease, relatively little is known about the associated morphologic and molecular changes in the peripheral lung of patients who die from Covid-19.MethodsWe examined 7 lungs obtained during autopsy from patients who died from Covid-19 and compared them with 7 lungs obtained during autopsy from patients who died from acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) secondary to influenza A(H1N1) infection and 10 age-matched, uninfected control lungs. The lungs were studied with the use of seven-color immunohistochemical analysis, micro-computed tomographic imaging, scanning electron microscopy, corrosion casting, and direct multiplexed measurement of gene expression.ResultsIn patients who died from Covid-19-associated or influenza-associated respiratory failure, the histologic pattern in the peripheral lung was diffuse alveolar damage with perivascular T-cell infiltration. The lungs from patients with Covid-19 also showed distinctive vascular features, consisting of severe endothelial injury associated with the presence of intracellular virus and disrupted cell membranes. Histologic analysis of pulmonary vessels in patients with Covid-19 showed widespread thrombosis with microangiopathy. Alveolar capillary microthrombi were 9 times as prevalent in patients with Covid-19 as in patients with influenza (P<0.001). In lungs from patients with Covid-19, the amount of new vessel growth - predominantly through a mechanism of intussusceptive angiogenesis - was 2.7 times as high as that in the lungs from patients with influenza (P<0.001).ConclusionsIn our small series, vascular angiogenesis distinguished the pulmonary pathobiology of Covid-19 from that of equally severe influenza virus infection. The universality and clinical implications of our observations require further research to define. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).Copyright © 2020 Massachusetts Medical Society.
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