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…

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More from @ZdenekVrozina

May 31
This study is important because it captures a small, systematic shift in a marker of cardiac injury across the population after COVID-19.
And that is exactly the signal that can be easily missed in an individual, but may matter in public health🧵
The authors had an unusually valuable situation. People had their troponin I measured before the pandemic, and then again after a period during which some of them had SARS2 infection.
The result is fairly consistent. Previous SARS2 infection was associated with higher cTnI after the pandemic and with a higher probability of troponin rising between the two measurements.
Read 14 tweets
May 28
This new study does not matter because IgG transfer is a new concept.
But because it pulls several pieces into one mechanistic chain - Long COVID patient IgG, tissue autoreactivity, Fc-mediated immune function, small fiber damage, pain/fatigue-like pathology, and CNS activation🧵
The authors used several independent methods. Tssue staining, proteome arrays, ELISA, IgG pull-down, mass spectrometry.
They found a broad range of autoantibodies in people with Long COVID.
A striking part of the signal pointed toward the nervous system.
Patient IgG reacted with tissues such as the locus coeruleus, thalamus, meninges, sciatic nerve, and also peripheral tissues including the thyroid, adrenal gland, heart muscle.
That matters because so many Long COVID symptoms are neurological, autonomic, or endocrine.
Read 18 tweets
May 28
Another study where long COVID does not look like a small residual problem after infection, but like broad chronic illness scattered across everyday medicine.
And that is exactly why the system often fails to see it🧵
The study analyzed data from 58 US hospitals.
The algorithm identified PASC in 16.28% of patients after COVID.
Roughly 1 in 6!
The most important part is not only how many people have long COVID.
It is that most of the detected manifestations were not short acute episodes.
They were mostly chronic or potentially chronic conditions.
Read 16 tweets
May 25
This paper is interesting because it identifies a concrete neurochemical signal in the CNS that connects long COVID/PASC, PEM, fatigue, and reduced physical endurance - lower activity of the central noradrenergic pathway in cerebrospinal fluid🧵
The study asked whether post-infectious ME/CFS and long COVID/PASC show measurable abnormalities in central catecholamine systems - specifically the norepinephrine and dopamine pathways.
The authors looked directly at neurochemical markers.
Not just another symptom description paper.
They measured catecholamines and their metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid.
For the norepinephrine pathway
norepinephrine + DHPG + MHPG
For the dopamine pathway
dopamine + DOPAC + HVA
So the point was not to rely on one isolated molecule, but estimate broader pathway activity.
Read 20 tweets
May 25
This new paper may be the most direct evidence so far that the SARS2 protein ORF3a can travel from the lungs to a distant organ through exosomes - in this case, the liver.
This is not a small detail. It may be one mechanism behind systemic COVID🧵
The point is not simply
Is the virus in this organ, yes or no?
The point is more uncomfortable
SARS2 may remain mostly in the respiratory tract, while some of its proteins travel elsewhere - and still affect distant organs.
The paper studied 133 patients with mild SARS2 infection and 63 negative controls in Shanghai, February 2024.
More than half of the COVID-positive patients had abnormal liver tests, mainly AST, ALT, and GGT.
Read 22 tweets
May 21
This may be one of the more important long COVID papers in a while.
A new study in Frontiers in Immunology suggests that COVID can trigger new-onset insulin resistance - and that this may drive abnormal NETosis in neutrophils months after infection🧵
NETosis is the process where neutrophils release web like structures made of DNA, histones, enzymes.
Normally, this helps trap pathogens.
But when excessive, NETs can -
damage the endothelium
trigger microclots!
amplify inflammation
activate coagulation.
Exactly the kind of pathology seen in COVID.
The study followed 60 COVID patients.
Among 36 people without prior glucose metabolism problems, 24 developed insulin resistance 4 months after infection.
That alone is a striking finding.
Read 15 tweets

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