Zdenek Vrozina Profile picture
Jan 18 15 tweets 2 min read Read on X
A new study in Journal of Clinical Medicine shows that after COVID-19, many patients have persistent impairment of oxygen transfer in the lungs (DLCO/KCO) - lasting 12 to 22 months, even when basic spirometry looks almost normal🧵
Key point?
FEV1 remains largely stable, while FVC improves only slowly over time.
This doesn’t look like classic airway obstruction. It points instead to restrictive and diffusion-level damage.
In simple terms.
Patients may breathe fine on spirometry, yet oxygen doesn’t pass efficiently from the lungs into the blood.
That’s why reduced DLCO/KCO matters.
It reflects dysfunction at the alveolar–capillary interface - where air, blood vessels, and endothelium meet.
This also explains the typical long-COVID pattern.
Exertional shortness of breath, fatigue, reduced exercise tolerance
- despite near-normal basic lung tests!
Importantly, patients with moderate or severe acute COVID had significantly worse long-term lung function than those with mild disease.
Acute severity translates into chronic physiological damage.
The most sensitive markers weren’t standard spirometry.
They were lung volumes and diffusion metrics (TLC, alveolar volume, KCO) - tests that are often not routinely performed.
Statistical analysis shows post-COVID lung damage isn’t one thing. There are different phenotypes - small airway involvement, diffusion impairment, restrictive volume loss - often overlapping.
SARS-CoV-2 is often described as a respiratory virus.
This kind of data makes it hard to avoid the conclusion that it is fundamentally a vascular disease, with the lungs as the clearest window into the damage.
If this were mainly an airway problem, we’d expect FEV1 to fall.
Instead, what persists is impaired gas exchange - a hallmark of microvascular and endothelial dysfunction.
The lungs are essentially a massive vascular organ.
Huge surface area + dense capillary network = the perfect place to detect microangiopathy and endothelial injury.
And the same vascular pattern shows up elsewhere.
Brain - hypometabolism, cognitive slowing
Heart - reduced exercise capacity
Muscles - early fatigue
Different organs. Same bottleneck - impaired microcirculation.
That’s why patients can have normal breathing tests and still feel profoundly unwell.
The air moves.
The oxygen delivery fails downstream.
Long COVID makes far more sense when start recognizing it as a systemic vascular–immune disorder, with the lungs acting as a window into the damage.
Daniela Robu Popa at al., Journal of Clinical Medicine 2026. Impact of COVID-19 on Respiratory Function: A Post-Recovery Comparative Assessment. mdpi.com/2077-0383/15/2…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Zdenek Vrozina

Zdenek Vrozina Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ZdenekVrozina

Feb 8
This study suggests that in some patients, COVID-19 triggers a long-term process of vascular and cardiac injury that can gradually increase pulmonary pressure, strain the right ventricle, and raise the risk of death in the following years🧵
The study followed 480 hospitalized patients (240 moderate, 240 severe) for one year after discharge. It assessed heart function using echocardiography and measured biomarkers of vascular inflammation.
In severe COVID-19, right-ventricular function was already significantly worse at the first study examination. Over the following year, pulmonary artery pressure increased by 17.8% in severe cases and 7.1% in moderate cases!
Read 14 tweets
Feb 6
If normal population plasma truly carries more low-grade inflammation, this study hints at a fork in the road.
Either we lower the bar and call it a new normal,
or this is a hidden population burden that will surface later as comorbidities🧵
A new study on the cytokine IL-32 after COVID-19 points directly at this uncomfortable question.
The authors analyzed nearly 1,000 healthy blood donors sampled before and during the pandemic, plus 212 hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
The result is consistent - plasma collected after 2020 shows systematically higher IL-32 levels compared to pre-pandemic plasma.
Read 9 tweets
Feb 6
Neurocognitive Long COVID doesn’t disappear.
Not with Omicron.
Not in a highly vaccinated population.
Even when most other organ-level signals fade🧵
A new population-level study from Singapore looked at 1.4 million COVID cases in a setting with >90% booster coverage.
Result - multi-organ Long COVID largely attenuates.
But the brain remains an exception.
The study tracked new medical diagnoses 31–300 days after infection across Delta and multiple Omicron waves (BA.1/2, BA.4/5, XBB).
Across variants, most organ systems normalize.
Neurocognitive diagnoses do not.
Read 10 tweets
Feb 5
This study does not tell us what exactly causes long COVID or ME/CFS, nor does it test clinical symptoms like PEM.
But it may tell us something just as important - what type of biological problem this likely is..🧵
The authors isolated immunoglobulins (IgG) from people with post-infectious ME/CFS, including post-COVID ME/CFS, and tested what these antibodies do to healthy cells.
In a subset of patients, these IgG alter the behavior of endothelial cells and their mitochondria.
Not by killing the cells or shutting down ATP production.
Read 17 tweets
Feb 2
This isn’t a new comparison.
For years, parallels between NeuroHIV and neuro-COVID/Long COVID have been discussed across fields.
What’s new is that they are now formally described as shared CNS mechanisms, not just analogy!🧵
Just a few years ago, parallels like
HIV - SARS-CoV-2
HAND - brain fog/neuro-LC
microglia - chronic inflammation
vasculature - cognition
were treated mainly as interesting analogies. With caution not to overstate them.
This new review formalizes the shift. These parallels are not Twitter pattern recognition, but convergent CNS phenotypes following viral insults.
A new review shows they are biologically grounded similarities.
Read 15 tweets
Feb 1
A new review links Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and COVID-19 through a shared core - neuroinflammation + oxidative stress.
The same pathways, the same immune nodes, the same vulnerabilities of the brain🧵
Key players.
Microglia (the brain’s innate immune cells) and neutrophils (peripheral rapid responders).
When the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is disrupted, neutrophils enter the CNS and inflammation becomes self-amplifying.
Neutrophils can form NETs (neutrophil extracellular traps - DNA + histones + enzymes like MPO/elastase).
In the brain, NETs mean oxidative damage, mitochondrial stress, neuronal injury - and further microglial activation. A vicious cycle.
Read 19 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(