Severity of COVID-19: Causes and Consequences — From Obesity to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Introduction:

In circumstances of COVID-19 epidemiological uncertainty, the causes and consequences of the disease remain important issues.

The aim of this study was to investigate obesity as a potential predisposition and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) as a possible consequence of COVID-19.

The study was conducted in two parts: a theoretical part, in which a literature review was performed, and an empirical part, in which COVID-19 patient survey data were analysed. To identify the main findings regarding the relationship between obesity and COVID-19, the literature review was focused on the investigation of systematic reviews and meta-analyses by three databases – Medline(via  PubMed),  Cochrane  COVID-19  Study  Register,  and  PROSPERO  (International prospective register of systematic reviews).

The patient survey was performed to investigate the relationship between obesity and severity of the disease, as well as the presence of CFS symptoms in COVID-19 patients in Latvia.

The main findings of the literature review showed that obesity increases the risk of hospitalisation, disease severity, clinical complications, poor outcomes, and mortality. The results of the patient survey showed that overweight and obesity were more critical factors for men (males) suffering with COVID-19 than for women (females) in Latvia.

The patient group with obesity caused almost half of all hospitalisations. The research data assumed that CFS  patients  were  not  a  high-risk  group  for  COVID-19,  but  COVID-19  caused  CFS-like symptoms in patients and potentially increased the number of undiagnosed patients.

In the context of further epidemiological uncertainty and the possibility of severe post-viral consequences, preventive measures are becoming increasingly important.

Source: Arāja, Diāna, Rovīte, Vita, Murovska, Modra, Terentjeva, Anna, Vaidere, Diāna, Vecvagare, Katrīne and Vīksna, Ludmila. Severity of COVID-19: Causes and Consequences — From Obesity to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Proceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B. Natural, Exact, and Applied Sciences., vol.75, no.6, 2021, pp.411-416. https://sciendo.com/article/10.2478/prolas-2021-0061 (Full text)

Subcortical brain segment volumes in Gulf War Illness and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Abstract:

Aims: There is controversy about brain volumes in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and Gulf War Illness (GWI). Subcortical regions were assessed because of significant differences in blood oxygenation level dependent signals in the midbrain between these diseases.

Materials and method: Magnetization-prepared rapid acquisition with gradient echo (MPRAGE) images from 3 Tesla structural magnetic resonance imaging scans from sedentary control (n = 34), CFS (n = 38) and GWI (n = 90) subjects were segmented in FreeSurfer. Segmented subcortical volumes were regressed against intracranial volume and age, then iteratively analyzed by multivariate general linear modeling with disease status, gender and demographics as independent co-variates.

Key findings: The optimal model for all subjects used disease status and gender as fixed factors with independent variables eliminated after iteration. Volumes of anterior and midanterior corpus callosum were significantly larger in GWI than CFS. Gender was a significant variable for many segment volumes, and so female and male subjects were analyzed separately. CFS females had smaller left putamen, right caudate and left cerebellum white matter than control women. CFS males had larger left hippocampus than GWI males. Orthostatic status and posttraumatic distress syndrome were not significant covariates.

Significance: CFS and GWI were appropriate “illness controls” for each other. The different patterns of adjusted segment volumes suggested that sexual dimorphisms contributed to pathological changes. Previous volumetric studies may need to be reevaluated to account for gender differences. The findings are framed by comparison to the spectrum of magnetic resonance imaging outcomes in the literature.

Source: Addiego FM, Zajur K, Knack S, Jamieson J, Rayhan RU, Baraniuk JN. Subcortical brain segment volumes in Gulf War Illness and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Life Sci. 2021 Jun 29:119749. doi: 10.1016/j.lfs.2021.119749. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 34214570. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34214570/