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COVID-19 as a polymorphic inflammatory spectrum of diseases: a review with focus on the brain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 March 2023

Siu Wa Tang*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA Institute of Brain Medicine, Hong Kong, China
Daiga Maret Helmeste
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA Institute of Brain Medicine, Hong Kong, China
Brian E. Leonard
Affiliation:
Institute of Brain Medicine, Hong Kong, China Department of Pharmacology, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland
*
Author for correspondence: Siu Wa Tang, Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

There appear to be huge variations and aberrations in the reported data in COVID-19 2 years now into the pandemic. Conflicting data exist at almost every level and also in the reported epidemiological statistics across different regions. It is becoming clear that COVID-19 is a polymorphic inflammatory spectrum of diseases, and there is a wide range of inflammation-related pathology and symptoms in those infected with the virus. The host’s inflammatory response to COVID-19 appears to be determined by genetics, age, immune status, health status and stage of disease. The interplay of these factors may decide the magnitude, duration, types of pathology, symptoms and prognosis in the spectrum of COVID-19 disorders, and whether neuropsychiatric disorders continue to be significant. Early and successful management of inflammation reduces morbidity and mortality in all stages of COVID-19.

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Scandinavian College of Neuropsychopharmacology

Summations

  • Accumulating data regarding COVID-19 show huge variations but inflammatory polymorphism may explain such variations in the data and the spectrum of COVID-19 diseases.

  • Interplay of factors, such as genetics, age, time, immune status and health status, contributes to inflammatory polymorphism and decides the magnitude, duration, types of pathology, symptoms and prognosis in the spectrum of COVID-19 disorders.

  • Significant neuropsychiatric disorders are present in acute, mid and long COVID.

  • Appropriate management of the polymorphic inflammation in each of the acute, mid and chronic stages of COVID-19 infection is critical for recovery from COVID-19.

Considerations

  • Well-designed clinical trials are required to confirm the efficacy and timing of various inflammation modulation measures, including biologics, NSAID, antihistamines, glucocorticoids, sigma receptor agonists and antagonists.

  • The neurobiology of brain area hypometabolism reported in COVID-19 is unclear and its relationship to neuropsychiatric disorders both require further research.

  • Specific preventive measures and treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms in different stages of COVID-19 require further research.

  • Identification of factors associated with the development of long COVID requires further research.

Introduction

At the beginning, COVID-19 was regarded as an acute infectious respiratory disease, similar to the SARS episode almost 20 years ago. The much higher infectivity, morbidity and mortality of COVID-19 than SARS was soon recognised. It is now clear that COVID-19 is not a simple acute respiratory infectious disease, but is a spectrum of diseases, exhibiting a high degree of polymorphism in symptoms, progression and sequalae. With the increasing number of patients reporting neurological symptoms, the SARS-CoV-2 virus is emerging as a new neuropathogen, responsible for a spectrum of neuropsychiatric disorders (Beghi et al., Reference Beghi, Giussani, Westenberg, Allegri, Garcia-Azorin, Guekht, Frontera, Kivipelto, Mangialasche, Mukaetova-Ladinska, Prasad, Chowdhary and Winkler2022, Reference Beghi, Giussani, Westenberg, Allegri, Garcia-Azorin, Guekht, Frontera, Kivipelto, Mangialasche, Mukaetova-Ladinska, Prasad, Chowdhary and Winkler2022b; Montalvan et al., Reference Montalvan, Lee, Bueso, De Toledo and Rivas2020).

The huge variance in published COVID-19 data and statistics from various sources around the world illustrated the polymorphic nature of COVID-19 very well. For example, the reported percentage of infected patients ending up with severe respiratory crisis, and the percentage of asymptomatic patients testing positive both showed significant variation across populations. They ranged from a low of a few percent to a high of almost 50% (He et al., Reference He, Sun, Fang, Huang, Gamber, Cai and Wu2020; Hu et al., Reference Hu, Song, Xu, Jin, Chen, Xu, Ma, Chen, Lin, Zheng, Wang, Hu, Yi and Shen2020; Huang et al., Reference Huang, Wang, Li, Ren, Zhao, Hu, Zhang, Fan, Xu, Gu, Cheng, Yu, Xia, Wei, Wu, Xie, Yin, Li, Liu, Xiao, Gao, Guo, Xie, Wang, Jiang, Gao, Jin, Wang and Cao2020; Mizumoto et al., Reference Mizumoto, Kagaya, Zarebski and Chowell2020; Shi et al., Reference Shi, Han, Jiang, Cao, Alwalid, Gu, Fan and Zheng2020; Tian et al., Reference Tian, Hu, Lou, Chen, Kang, Xiang, Chen, Wang, Liu, Liu, Chen, Zhang, Li, Li, Lian, Niu, Zhang and Zhang2020; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Hu, Hu, Zhu, Liu, Zhang, Wang, Xiang, Cheng, Xiong, Zhao, Li, Wang and Peng2020; Sah et al., Reference Sah, Fitzpatrick, Zimmer, Abdollahi, Juden-Kelly, Moghadas, Singer and Galvani2021; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Wang, Shen, Zhang, Cen, Wang, Zhao, Zhou, Hu, Wang, Liu, Miao, Jones, Ma, He, Cao, Cheng and Li2021b). Accepting that there was sampling bias and methodological differences across populations, including differences in the availability of medical care, hospitalisation, vaccination and viral testing, infected individuals not detected or unaware of their infections, or not reporting their infection due to other reasons, the size of the variance and heterogeneity in the reported data is still astonishing.

Of the infected, some patients (as high as 19%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) assessed on November 19, 2022), failed to recover completely, with the lingering symptoms now commonly named as ‘Long COVID’, which seemed to be unrelated to the severity of the acute COVID-19 infection (Asadi-Pooya et al., Reference Asadi-Pooya, Nemati, Shahisavandi, Akbari, Emami, Lotfi, Rostamihosseinkhani, Barzegar, Kabiri, Zeraatpisheh, Farjoud-Kouhanjani, Jafari, Sasannia, Ashrafi, Nazeri and Nasiri2021; Crook et al., Reference Crook, Raza, Nowell, Young and Edison2021; Fernández-de-Las-Peñas et al., Reference Fernández-de-Las-Peñas, Gómez-Mayordomo, Cuadrado, Palacios-Ceña, Florencio, Guerrero, García-Azorín, Hernández-Barrera and Arendt-Nielsen2021; Raveendran et al., Reference Raveendran, Jayadevan and Sashidharan2021; Sykes et al., Reference Sykes, Holdsworth, Jawad, Gunasekera, Morice and Crooks2021; Yong, Reference Yong2021; De Luca et al., Reference De Luca, Bonanno and Calabrò2022). A high proportion of long COVID symptoms appeared to be of a neuropsychiatric nature (Aiyegbusi et al., Reference Aiyegbusi, Hughes, Turner, Rivera, McMullan, Chandan, Haroon, Price, Davies, Nirantharakumar, Sapey and Calvert2021; Taquet et al., Reference Taquet, Geddes, Husain, Luciano and Harrison2021; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Xu and Al-Aly2022). Salamanna et al. (Reference Salamanna, Veronesi, Martini, Landini and Fini2021) reported that while 20.70% of long-term COVID-19 symptoms were related to abnormal lung function, neurologic complaints and olfactory dysfunctions exceeded it at around 24.13%, plus another 55.17% with symptoms such as chronic fatigue, headache and pain, all of which might be of neuropsychiatric origin. The prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in long COVID was confirmed in the neuroepidemiology report of Beghi et al. (Reference Beghi, Giussani, Westenberg, Allegri, Garcia-Azorin, Guekht, Frontera, Kivipelto, Mangialasche, Mukaetova-Ladinska, Prasad, Chowdhary and Winkler2022). Presence of neurological manifestations at all stages of COVID-19 was also found to be associated with a more severe disease, a higher death rate and the continued presence of long-term symptoms (Beghi et al., Reference Beghi, Giussani, Westenberg, Allegri, Garcia-Azorin, Guekht, Frontera, Kivipelto, Mangialasche, Mukaetova-Ladinska, Prasad, Chowdhary and Winkler2022b).

The terms acute, mid and long COVID are often used loosely to categorise three stages of COVID-19, with distinctive symptoms in each stage. In the F-18 Deoxy-glucose Positron Emission Tomography scanning technique (FDG-PET) studies of Kas et al. (Reference Kas, Soret, Pyatigoskaya, Habert, Hesters, Le Guennec, Paccoud, Bombois, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Carvalho, Sagnes, Dubois, Navarro, Louapre, Stojkovic, Idbaih, Rosso, Grabli, Gales, Millet, Rohaut, Bayen, Dupont, Bruneteau, Lehericy, Seilhean, Durr, Kas, Lamari, Houot, Brochard, Dupont, Lubetzki, Seilhean, Pradat-Diehl, Rosso, Hoang-Xuan, Fontaine, Naccache, Fossati, Arnulf, Durr, Carpentier, Lehericy, Edel, Di Stefano, Robain, Thoumie, Degos, Sharshar, Alamowitch, Apartis-Bourdieu, Peretti, Ursu, Dzierzynski, Bourron, Belmin, Oquendo, Pautas, Verny, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Samson, Leder, Leger, Deltour, Baronnet, Gales, Bombois, Touat, Idbaih, Sanson, Dehais, Houillier, Laigle-Donadey, Psimaras, Alenton, Younan, Villain, Grabli, del Mar Amador, Bruneteau, Louapre, Mariani, Mezouar, Mangone, Meneret, Hartmann, Tarrano, Bendetowicz, Pradat, Baulac, Sambin, Salachas, Le Forestier, Pichit, Chochon, Hesters, Nguyen, Procher, Demoule, Morawiec, Mayaux, Faure, Ewenczyk, Coarelli, Heinzmann, Charles, Stojkovic, Masingue, Bassez, Navarro, An, Worbe, Lambrecq, Debs, Musat, Lenglet, Lambrecq, Hanin, Chougar, Shor, Pyatigorskaya, Galanaud, Leclercq, Demeret, Rohaut, Cao, Marois, Weiss, Gassama, Le Guennec, Degos, Jacquens, Similowski, Morelot-Panzini, Rotge, Saudreau, Millet, Pitron, Sarni, Girault, Maatoug, Gales, Leu, Bayen, Thivard, Mokhtari, Plu, Gonçalves, Bottin, Yger, Ouvrard, Haddad, Ketz, Lafuente, Oasi, Megabarne, Herve, Salman, Rametti-Lacroux, Chalançon, Herve, Royer, Beauzor, Maheo, Laganot, Minelli, Fekete, Grine, Biet, Hilab, Besnard, Bouguerra, Goudard, Houairi, Al-Youssef, Pires, Oukhedouma, Siuda-Krzywicka, Malkinson, Agguini, Douzane, Said and Houot2021) and Martini et al. (Reference Martini, Carli, Kiferle, Piersanti, Palumbo, Morbelli, Calcagni, Perani and Sestini2022), the acute stage was regarded as within 1 month of infection, the mid stage is from after the acute stage to about 6 or 7 months and the late or long COVID stage is from after 6 months of infection. In terms of severity of infection, COVID-19 infection stages begin with the asymptomatic viral entry and replication, followed by viral dissemination with symptoms ranged from mild to moderate. Only some of those infected may progress into multi-system inflammation with severe symptoms and even end up in critical multi-organ dysfunction with endothelial damage and thrombosis (Cordon-Cardo et al., Reference Cordon-Cardo, Pujadas, Wajnberg, Sebra, Patel, Firpo-Betancourt, Fowkes, Sordillo, Paniz-Mondolfi, Gregory, Krammer, Simon, Isola, Soon-Shiong, Aberg, Fuster and Reich2020). The two factors, temporal and severity of infection, in combination, appear to be useful in understanding the progress and polymorphic nature of COVID-19.

Infection by the SARS-CoV-2 virus alone appeared to be insufficient for development of the spectrum of COVID-19 diseases (Al-Aly et al., Reference Al-Aly, Xie and Bowe2021; Michelen et al., Reference Michelen, Manoharan, Elkheir, Cheng, Dagens, Hastie, O’Hara, Suett, Dahmash, Bugaeva, Rigby, Munblit, Harriss, Burls, Foote, Scott, Carson, Olliaro, Sigfrid and Stavropoulou2021; Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, Ren, Heath, Dasmariñas, Jubilo, Guo, Lipsitch and Daugherty2022). We discuss a hypothesis that COVID-19 inflammatory polymorphism is the basis underlying the spectrum of COVID-19 disease, determines the severity of symptoms, as well as the response to treatment. A substantial amount of new data has appeared in the literature since our last reviews on COVID-19 and neuroinflammatory disorders (Tang et al., Reference Tang, Tang and Leonard2017, Reference Tang, Helmeste and Leonard2021, Reference Tang, Leonard and Helmeste2022a; Leonard, Reference Leonard2018).

Method

We searched the English language literature, including foreign-language publications with informative abstracts in English, up to January 20th 2023, using PubMed (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov), crossing the keywords ‘COVID-19’, ‘long COVID’, ‘Kawasaki disease’, ‘SARS-CoV-2 virus’, respectively, and in turn with the following words: brain, psychiatric disorders, depression, neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation, polymorphism, brain circuits, neurotransmitters, histamine, sigma receptor, cortisol, glucose metabolism, brain metabolism, immunological response, brain imaging and neurotransmitter imaging. We focused mainly on the polymorphism of COVID-19 inflammation, COVID-19-induced changes in brain area and neurocircuit functions, neurotransmitters and their receptors and brain metabolic changes. Manuscripts were included in this review only after all three authors evaluated the quality of the research and relevancy to the various sections of this review. Reviews of a general nature without data were excluded. Health statistics were obtained from the World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA (CDC) websites, accessed on 10th November 2022.

Results

Inflammation

Inflammation is a critical component in the progression of many diseases. For example, there is strong evidence that sustained and abnormal local microenvironmental immune response as well as systemic inflammation would lead to progression of tumours and many other diseases in human (Coussens & Werb, Reference Coussens and Werb2002; Diakos et al., Reference Diakos, Charles, McMillan and Clarke2014; Greten & Grivennikov, Reference Greten and Grivennikov2019; Singh et al., Reference Singh, Baby, Rajguru, Patil, Thakkannavar and Pujari2019). Some of the outcomes of patients in cancer and many other inflammatory-based diseases, including COVID-19, can be improved through appropriate management of the inflammation, which differs at different stages of the disease.

Inflammation in acute COVID-19

SARS-CoV-2 infects cells by binding their spike proteins to the angiotensin-converting enzyme II (ACE-2) receptors. Availability and quantity of ACE-2 receptors, genetically and epigenetically determined, is an important factor in the initiation and progress in COVID-19. The expression of ACE-2 receptors is linked to the immune and inflammatory response through a complex and not yet clear mechanism (Costagliola et al., Reference Costagliola, Spada and Consolini2021).

The high density of ACE-2 receptors in the olfactory epithelium explains the easy entry of the SARS-CoV-2 virus via this path (Bilinska et al., Reference Bilinska, von Bartheld and Butowt2021; Butowt & von Bartheld, Reference Butowt and von Bartheld2022; Mohamed et al., Reference Mohamed, Johansson, Jonsson and Schiöth2022). Thus, a common pathway for the virus to enter the human body is through the olfactory bulb to reach other parts of the body, including the nervous system. Temporary loss of smell, or anosmia, is now known to be one of the earliest signs of neurological damage in COVID-19. While anosmia is experienced by approximately 50% of those infected, inflammatory polymorphism is also seen, as anosmia in those infected varied tremendously between age categories, gender and individuals. Anosmia, more common in the elderly and in the female gender, may be an early sign of early neuro involvement in COVID-19 (Vallée, Reference Vallée2021). Anosmia, together with fatigue, headache, dyspnoea, are main long COVID-19 symptoms (Sudre et al., Reference Sudre, Murray, Varsavsky, Graham, Penfold, Bowyer, Pujol, Klaser, Antonelli, Canas, Molteni, Modat, Jorge Cardoso, May, Ganesh, Davies, Nguyen, Drew, Astley, Joshi, Merino, Tsereteli, Fall, Gomez, Duncan, Menni, Williams, Franks, Chan, Wolf, Ourselin, Spector and Steves2021). Lower expression of ACE-2 receptors in the female sex may explain the gender difference in incidence of anosmia observed. The ACE-2 receptor gene and other immunological genes are on the X chromosome, and oestrogen reduces the expression of ACE-2 receptors in females (Najafloo et al., Reference Najafloo, Majidi, Asghari, Aleemardani, Kamrava, Simorgh, Seifalian, Bagher and Seifalian2021). With regard to age differences in anosmia, which is more common in the middle age group, nasal gene expression of ACE-2 was found to increase with age, reaching its highest level in middle age (Bunyavanich et al., Reference Bunyavanich, Do and Vicencio2020), until a decline occurs after degeneration of the whole olfactory structure in older age. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) has been reported to play a significant role in anosmia, with correlations between its levels and the time required for recovery (Cazzolla et al., Reference Cazzolla, Lovero, Lo Muzio, Testa, Schirinzi, Palmieri, Pozzessere, Procacci, Di Comite, Ciavarella, Pepe, De Ruvo, Crincoli, Di Serio and Santacroce2020). Genetic and epigenetic-based differences in inflammatory response may contribute to the variations in anosmia among those infected.

There are genetic and epigenetics factors reported in the expression of ACE-2 receptors (COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative, 2021; Deng et al., Reference Deng, Yan and Yuan2021; Ji et al., Reference Ji, Chen, Ze and Zhou2022; Verma et al., Reference Verma, Tsao, Thomann, Ho, Iyengar, Luoh, Carr, Crawford, Efird, Huffman, Hung, Ivey, Levin, Lynch, Natarajan, Pyarajan, Bick, Costa, Genovese, Hauger, Madduri, Pathak, Polimanti, Voight, Vujkovic, Zekavat, Zhao, Ritchie, Chang, Cho, Casas, Tsao, Gaziano, O’Donnell, Damrauer and Liao2021; Yildirim et al., Reference Yildirim, Sahin, Yazar and Bozok Cetintas2021), which may explain the polymorphic nature of COVID-19 inflammation through the ACE-2 expression factor (Ragia & Manolopoulos, Reference Ragia and Manolopoulos2020; Secolin et al., Reference Secolin, de Araujo, Gonsales, Rocha, Naslavsky, Marco, Bicalho, Vazquez, Zatz, Silva and Lopes-Cendes2021; Severe COVID-19 GWAS Group, Reference Ellinghaus, Degenhardt and Bujanda2020). A number of HLA alleles and genes have been found to be associated with COVID-19 susceptibility and there are low-risk alleles as well (Fricke-Galindo & Falfán-Valencia, Reference Fricke-Galindo and Falfán-Valencia2021). Epigenetic research suggested that other epigenetic changes, such as DNA methylation, ACE-2 gene methylation and post-translational histone modifications, may underline host, tissue, age and sex-based differences in the progress of viral infection (Chlamydas et al., Reference Chlamydas, Papavassiliou and Piperi2021).

Though the olfactory nerve is devoid of ACE-2 receptors, there are other explanations how the virus may enter brain areas via supporting cells and other adjacent cell types which do contain the ACE-2 receptors, such as the glial cells (Panariello et al., Reference Panariello, Cellini, Speciani, De Ronchi and Atti2020).

The sigma receptor and SARS-CoV-2 entry

The relationship between sigma receptors, psychiatric disorders and psychotropics was raised more than 20 years ago (Helmeste et al., Reference Helmeste, Tang, Fang and Li1996a, Reference Helmeste, Tang, Bunney, Potkin and Jones1996b, Reference Helmeste, Tang, Li and Fang1997; Tang et al., Reference Tang, Helmeste, Fang, Li, Vu, Bunney, Potkin and Jones1997). However, its role in neurotransmission is still far from clear. The observation of possible reduced COVID-19 mortality in patients on certain psychotropics interestingly renews attention to this receptor (Tang et al., Reference Tang, Helmeste and Leonard2021, Reference Tang, Leonard and Helmeste2022a). The accidental discovery of the benefit of fluvoxamine in COVID-19 can be explained by its sigma receptor affinity. Many more discussions regarding the beneficial role of antidepressant drugs in COVID-19 have appeared in the literature in the recent 2 years (Facente et al., Reference Facente, Reiersen, Lenze, Boulware and Klausner2021; Hoertel, Reference Hoertel2021; Hoertel et al., Reference Hoertel, Sánchez-Ricó, Vernet, Beeker, Jannot, Neuraz, Elisa, Nicolas, Christel, Alexandre, Guillaume, Mélodie, Ali, Cédric, Guillaume, Anita and Frédéric2021; Oskotsky et al., Reference Oskotsky, Maric, Tang, Oskotsky, Wong, Aghaeepour, Sirota and Stevenson2021; Bonnet & Juckel, Reference Bonnet and Juckel2022; Borovcanin et al., Reference Borovcanin, Vesic, Balcioglu and Mijailović2022; Firouzabadi et al., Reference Firouzabadi, Kheshti, Abdollahifard, Taherifard and Kheshti2022; Foletto et al., Reference Foletto, da Rosa, Serafin and Hörner2022; Hashimoto et al., Reference Hashimoto, Suzuki and Hashimoto2022; Mahdi et al., Reference Mahdi, Hermán, Réthelyi and Bálint2022; Nakhaee et al., Reference Nakhaee, Zangiabadian, Bayati, Rahmanian, Ghaffari Jolfayi and Rakhshanderou2022).

After binding to the ACE-2 receptors, the SARS-CoV-2 virus interacts with the sigma-1 receptors located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), converting it into an ideal place for replication (Vela, Reference Vela2020). Subsequent SARS-CoV-2 replication takes place in an ER-derived intermediate compartment in the ER-Golgi (Harrison et al., Reference Harrison, Lin and Wang2020; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xie and Hashimoto2020).

It has been suggested that ER stress due to the replication of the virus may lead to the development of a cytokine storm, with high mortality (Aoe, Reference Aoe2020; Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Czinn, Reiter and Blanchard2020; Fajgenbaum & June, Reference Fajgenbaum and June2020; Harrison et al., Reference Harrison, Lin and Wang2020; Santerre et al., Reference Santerre, Arjona, Allen, Shcherbik and Sawaya2020; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xie and Hashimoto2020). High levels of ER stress markers [i.e. glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78), C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP), phospho-extracellular signal regulated kinase (PERK)] in COVID-19 have been reported (Köseler et al., Reference Köseler, Sabirli, Gören, Türkçüer and Kurt2020).

In addition, Sigma 1 receptors also regulate early steps of viral RNA replication (Friesland et al., Reference Friesland, Mingorance, Chung, Chisari and Gastaminza2013). Downregulation of sigma-1 receptor expression may lead to a proportional decrease in susceptibility to virus infection in some individuals.

Thus, the polymorphic nature of the quantity and status of sigma receptors and ACE-2 receptors may contribute to the polymorphic nature of the inter-individual difference in susceptibility to the virus’s infectivity.

Cytokines and cytokine storms

Cytokines are small signalling proteins and one of their functions is immunomodulation. Cytokines include interferons (IFN), interleukins (IL) and tumour necrosis factors (TNF). IFN are signalling proteins released in response to viral invasion or other foreign substances. Type 1 IFNs (such as IFN-α, IFN-β, IFN-ϵ, IFN-κ) are released by fibroblasts and monocytes. Release of IFN-α is inhibited by the cytokine IL-10. Type II IFNs (IFN-γ) are released by cytotoxic T cells and type-1 T helper cells and activated by IL 12. TNF signalling occurs through two receptors, pro-inflammatory type 1(NFR1) and anti-inflammatory type 2 (TNFR2) receptors. TNFR1 signalling is apoptotic and TNFR2 signalling promotes cell proliferation (Jang et al., Reference Jang, Lee, Shin, Song, Park, Kang, Lee and Yang2021).

Therefore, there are delicate checks and balances which limit the production and functions of various cytokines in order to contain viral, bacterial and other pathogens, yet control the collateral damages which may occur during the process (Aggarwal, Reference Aggarwal2003; Mangalmurti & Hunter, Reference Mangalmurti and Hunter2020; Jang et al., Reference Jang, Lee, Shin, Song, Park, Kang, Lee and Yang2021). Anti-inflammatory cytokines (for example, IL-1 receptor antagonists, IL-4, 6, 10, 11 and 13) are those which control the pro-inflammatory cytokines (cytokine receptors for IL-1, TNFα, IL-18) (Opal & DePalo, Reference Opal and DePalo2000).

Cytokine storms refer to an excessive, exaggerated cytokine response or loss of balance or control in the pro-and anti-inflammatory cytokine responses to pathogen invasion. While normally protective, an exaggerated host immune response to COVID-19 infection appeared to underlie some severe cases of COVID-19. Recent studies have shown that impaired response of type-1 IFNs in the early stage of COVID-19 infection played a major role in the development of cytokine storm, and various cytokines, such as IL-6, IL-1, IL-12, TNF (tumour necrosis factor) and IFNγ have been shown to be involved in severe COVID-19 (Alunno et al., Reference Alunno, Carubbi and Rodríguez-Carrio2020; Bhaskar et al., Reference Bhaskar, Sinha, Banach, Mittoo, Weissert, Kass, Rajagopal, Pai and Kutty2020; Cabler et al., Reference Cabler, French and Orvedahl2020; Mangalmurti & Hunter, Reference Mangalmurti and Hunter2020; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Lee, Yang, Lee, Effenberger, Szpirt, Kronbichler and Shin2021; Sette & Crotty, Reference Sette and Crotty2021; Yang et al., Reference Yang, Tsai, Su and Wu2021).

Apart from acute exaggerated cytokine responses resulting in cytokine storms, persistent or lasting elevation of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, IL-1β and TNF are associated with manifestations of long COVID such as enduring neuroinflammation (Mehandru & Merad, Reference Mehandru and Merad2022) leading to cognitive decline.

Some factors underlying difference in Interferon response between individuals have been discovered. These include autoantibodies against type 1 Interferon (IFN) (Manry et al., Reference Manry, Bastard and Gervais2022), inborn errors in type 1 IFN immunity (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xie and Hashimoto2020) and IFN resistance of emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants (Guo et al., Reference Guo, Barrett, Morrison, Mickens, Vladar, Hasenkrug, Poeschla and Santiago2022). Autoantibodies against type I IFNs strongly increased fatality rate at all ages in both men and women and are strong predictors of life-threatening COVID-19 (Manry et al., Reference Manry, Bastard and Gervais2022). Similarities in clinical and cytokine responses between COVID-19 human patients and genetically diverse mouse models have been reported (Robertson et al., Reference Robertson, Bedard, McNally, Lewis, Clancy, Shaia, Broeckel, Chiramel, Sturdevant, Forte, Preuss, Baker, Harder, Brunton, Munger, Sturdevant, Martens, Holland, Rosenthal and Best2021). The same group also reported that clinical improvement was correlated with IFN response, as in humans, in that an early IFN response was associated with a rapid viral clearance and mild disease, while a delayed IFN response was associated with viral persistence and inflammation (Rosenthal, Reference Rosenthal2022). Thus, genetic-based polymorphism in immune responses, at various levels, may explain the differential acute response and later progress in those infected.

Previous studies in other diseases have already reported the association between genetic polymorphisms in cytokine genes and the susceptibility to inflammatory-related disorders, such as haematologic cancers. For example, Monroy et al. (Reference Monroy, Cortes, Lopez, Rourke, Etzel, Younes, Strom and El-Zein2011) observed that, in combination, allelic variants in the COX2, IL18, ILR4 and IL10 genes modify the risk for developing Hodgkin’s disease.

In patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection, high C reactive protein (CRP) level was reported to be strongly associated with severe illness and mortality (C reactive protein level > 200 in 5279 patients reported by Petrilli et al., Reference Petrilli, Jones, Yang, Rajagopalan, O’Donnell, Chernyak, Tobin, Cerfolio, Francois and Horwitz2020). Smilowitz et al. (Reference Smilowitz, Kunichoff, Garshick, Shah, Pillinger, Hochman and Berger2021) measured CRP in 2601 patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection and found CRP level to be strongly associated with venous thrombo-embolism, acute kidney injury, critical illness and mortality. Thus, CRP, as an indicator of inflammation, could be used to measure the degree of systemic inflammation and severity of COVID-19 illness could be stratified to guide therapeutic planning.

Some genes associated with COVID-19 appear to affect the risk of developing autoimmune disease (Verma et al., Reference Verger, Kas, Dudouet, Goehringer, Salmon-Ceron and Guedj2022). Some long COVID cases are characterised by immune dysregulation with autoimmune nature. Autoimmune reactions in adult patients and allergic reactions in children appear to be critical factors (Ortona & Malorni, Reference Ortona and Malorni2022; Osmanov et al., Reference Osmanov, Spiridonova, Bobkova, Gamirova, Shikhaleva, Andreeva, Blyuss, El-Taravi, DunnGalvin, Comberiati, Peroni, Apfelbacher, Genuneit, Mazankova, Miroshina, Chistyakova, Samitova, Borzakova, Bondarenko, Korsunskiy, Konova, Hanson, Carson, Sigfrid, Scott, Greenhawt, Whittaker, Garralda, Swann, Buonsenso, Nicholls, Simpson, Jones, Semple, Warner, Vos, Olliaro and Munblit2022). Reactivated latent viruses (which may affect long COVID symptoms) may also appear after mild asymptomatic COVID-19 (Apostolou et al., Reference Apostolou, Rizwan, Moustardas, Sjögren, Bertilson, Bragée, Polo and Rosén2022). Historically, immune genes protective against the bubonic plague, especially in Northern European populations, are associated with increased susceptibility to autoimmune diseases (Klunk et al., Reference Klunk, Vilgalys, Demeure, Cheng, Shiratori, Madej, Beau, Elli, Patino, Redfern, DeWitte, Gamble, Boldsen, Carmichael, Varlik, Eaton, Grenier, Golding, Devault, Rouillard, Yotova, Sindeaux, Ye, Bikaran, Dumaine, Brinkworth, Missiakas, Rouleau, Steinrücken, Pizarro-Cerdá, Poinar and Barreiro2022). It is likely that this susceptibility to autoimmune diseases will affect the appearance of long COVID and should be investigated in more detail.

COVID-19 neuroinflammation

Once a virus has succeeded in entering the body, it triggers off inflammation. At the acute stage, vasculitis is a major pathology, which includes the progression of macro and micro thrombosis, as well as disseminated intravascular coagulation (Asakura & Ogawa, Reference Asakura and Ogawa2021). There was a high rate of coagulopathy reported in COVID-19 patients, with an astonishing rate of venous thromboembolism and pulmonary embolism at 42% and 17%, respectively, in severe cases (Wu et al., Reference Wu, Zuo, Yang, Luo, Jiang, Xia, Xiao, Liu, Ye and Deng2021). Arterial thrombotic events occur at various sites including coronaries, extremities and importantly, the brain (De Roquetaillade et al., Reference de Roquetaillade, Chousterman, Tomasoni, Zeitouni, Houdart, Guedon, Reiner, Bordier, Gayat, Montalescot, Metra and Mebazaa2021). Neurovascular inflammatory thrombotic events may cause severe damage to the brain at this early stage of COVID-19 with ominous consequences.

While attention was initially focused on vascular inflammation causing thrombosis and carditis (Sawalha et al., Reference Sawalha, Abozenah, Kadado, Battisha, Al-Akchar, Salerno, Hernandez-Montfort and Islam2021), the occurrence of troubling neuropsychiatric symptoms, especially cognitive impairment, was soon called to attention (Ceban et al., Reference Ceban, Ling, Lui, Lee, Gill, Teopiz, Rodrigues, Subramaniapillai, Di Vincenzo, Cao, Lin, Mansur, Ho, Rosenblat, Miskowiak, Vinberg, Maletic and McIntyre2022; Hugon et al., Reference Hugon, Msika, Queneau, Farid and Paquet2022a). Normally, peripheral-to-brain immune signalling is tightly regulated, but a cytokine storm may lead to a disruption of the blood brain barrier (BBB), resulting in neuroinflammation, encephalopathy and serious neuropsychiatric consequences (Obermeier et al., Reference Obermeier, Daneman and Ransohoff2013; Huang et al., Reference Huang, Hussain and Chang2021; Pensato et al., Reference Pensato, Muccioli, Cani, Janigro, Zinzani, Guarino, Cortelli and Bisulli2021). Cytokine storm has also been linked to brain pathology such as neurodegeneration, in which elevation of pro-inflammatory cytokine expression, namely IL-1β, has profound effects on synaptic plasticity and, consequentially, cognition (Muscat & Barrientos, Reference Muscat and Barrientos2021).

It is important to mention that Bost et al. (Reference Bost, De Sanctis, Canè, Ugel, Donadello, Castellucci, Eyal, Fiore, Anselmi, Barouni, Trovato, Caligola, Lamolinara, Iezzi, Facciotti, Mazzariol, Gibellini, De Nardo, Tacconelli, Gottin, Polati, Schwikowski, Amit and Bronte2021) described that a lung CXCR6+ effector memory T cell subset was associated with better prognosis in patients with severe COVID-19, as COVID-19-induced myeloid dysregulation and lymphoid impairment may establish ‘immune silence’ in some patients with critical COVID-19, and cytokine storm is avoided (Tang et al., Reference Tang, Yin, Hu and Mei2020; Zheng et al., Reference Zheng, Gao, Wang, Song, Liu, Sun, Xu and Tian2020). COVID-19 involves marked increases in peripheral IL-6, TNFα, and IL-1β and cytokines are known to have a profound impact on working memory and attention. Cytokines might be key mediators in the aetiology of COVID-19 induced cognitive impairments (Alnefeesi et al., Reference Alnefeesi, Siegel, Lui, Teopiz, Ho, Lee, Nasri, Gill, Lin, Cao, Rosenblat and McIntyre2021).

Garcia et al. (Reference Garcia, Barreras, Lewis, Pinilla, Sokoll, Kickler, Mostafa, Caturegli, Moghekar, Fitzgerald and Pardo2021) measured cytokines, inflammation and coagulation markers (high-sensitivity-C Reactive Protein [hsCRP], ferritin, fibrinogen, D-dimer, Factor VIII) and neurofilament light chain (NF-L) in 18 COVID-19 subjects with neurological complications. They found that their CSF showed a paucity of neuroinflammatory changes, absence of pleocytosis or specific increases in pro-inflammatory markers or cytokines. Anti-SARS-CoV2 antibodies in CSF of COVID-19 subjects were observed despite no evidence of SARS-CoV2 viral RNA, but CSF-hsCRP was present. They concluded that the data did not support inflammatory neurological complications in COVID-19.

Their data contrasts that of Crunfli et al. (Reference Crunfli, Carregari, Veras, Silva, Nogueira, Antunes, Vendramini, Valença, Brandão-Teles, Zuccoli, Reis-de-Oliveira, Silva-Costa, Saia-Cereda, Smith, Codo, de Souza, Muraro, Parise, Toledo-Teixeira, Santos de Castro, Melo, Almeida, Firmino, Paiva, Silva, Guimarães, Mendes, Ludwig, Ruiz, Knittel, Davanzo, Gerhardt, Rodrigues, Forato, Amorim, Brunetti, Martini, Benatti, Batah, Siyuan, João, Aventurato, Rabelo de Brito, Mendes, da Costa, Alvim, da Silva Júnior, Damião, de Sousa, da Rocha, Gonçalves, Lopes da Silva, Bettini, Campos, Ludwig, Tavares, Pontelli, Viana, Martins, Vieira, Alves-Filho, Arruda, Podolsky-Gondim, Santos, Neder, Damasio, Rehen, Vinolo, Munhoz, Louzada-Junior, Oliveira, Cunha, Nakaya, Mauad, Duarte-Neto, Ferraz da Silva, Dolhnikoff, Saldiva, Farias, Cendes, Moraes-Vieira, Fabro, Sebollela, Proença-Modena, Yasuda, Mori, Cunha and Martins-de-Souza2022) who provided evidence that the SARS-CoV-2 virus was indeed present in the human brain, where it infects astrocytes and to a lesser extent, neurons. They showed that astrocytes responded to the infection by remodelling energy metabolism, which in turn, alters the levels of metabolites available to neurons, which then impaired neuronal viability.

‘Brain fog’ is one of the commonest reported symptoms in long COVID (Chasco et al., Reference Chasco, Dukes, Jones, Comellas, Hoffman and Garg2022) and closely related to chronic neuroinflammation. Subjective changes in brain functions, such as quantitative electroencephalography have been reported (Kopańska et al., Reference Kopańska, Ochojska, Muchacka, Dejnowicz-Velitchkov, Banaś-Ząbczyk and Szczygielski2022). The fatigue and cognitive impairment are similar to that of chronic fatigue syndrome (Azcue et al., Reference Azcue, Gómez-Esteban, Acera, Tijero, Fernandez, Ayo-Mentxakatorre, Pérez-Concha, Murueta-Goyena, Lafuente, Prada, López de Munain, Ruiz-Irastorza, Ribacoba, Gabilondo and Del Pino2022) and neuroinflammation is likely the primary cause in both. The neuroinflammatory basis of brain fog in COVID survivors has been compared to that of cancer-therapy induced cognitive impairment, with white matter microglial reactivity and consequent neural dysregulation (Fernández-Castañeda et al., Reference Fernández-Castañeda, Lu, Geraghty, Song, Lee, Wood, O’Dea, Dutton, Shamardani, Nwangwu, Mancusi, Yalçın, Taylor, Acosta-Alvarez, Malacon, Keough, Ni, Woo, Contreras-Esquivel, Toland, Gehlhausen, Klein, Takahashi, Silva, Israelow, Lucas, Mao, Peña-Hernández, Tabachnikova, Homer, Tabacof, Tosto-Mancuso, Breyman, Kontorovich, FerrMcCarthy, Quezado, Vogel, Hefti, Perl, Liddelow, Folkerth, Putrino, Nath, Iwasaki and Monje2022). Chronic cytokinemia affecting BBB permeability, inducing neurotoxicity, plus the generation of autoantibodies resulting in the interference with neurogenesis, neuronal repair, chemotaxis and microglia function naturally would result in cognitive impairment (Elizalde-Díaz et al., Reference Elizalde-Díaz, Miranda-Narváez, Martínez-Lazcano and Martínez-Martínez2022).

There is speculative comparison of COVID-19 symptoms to bipolar disorders, citing the commonality of cytokine disorder, sleep disorders, and tryptophan metabolism in both (Lorkiewicz & Waszkiewicz, Reference Lorkiewicz and Waszkiewicz2022). ADHD poses increased risk for COVID-19 but may reduce risk of severe outcomes. ADHD medications modestly impacted COVID-19 risk (Heslin et al., Reference Heslin, Haruna, George, Chen, Nobel, Anderson, Faraone and Zhang-James2022). There is obviously a need to separate speculations and solid evidence and how specifically the COVID-19 virus may change the brain and its function in terms of neuropathways.

Hypometabolism and hypermetabolism in brain areas revealed by FDG-PET

New imaging techniques with high sensitivity and specificity are available for the investigation of COVID-19-induced brain changes down to the neurotransmitter and receptor level. These imaging techniques are expensive and complex, requiring teamwork of radiochemists, radiologists and experienced neuropsychiatrists. This, compounded by the polymorphic nature of COVID-19 inflammation, limits the size of patient inclusion and thus created the difficulty of interpretating highly variable data in small patient samples.

The relatively simple FDG-PET, originally used extensively in neuropsychiatric research, is now standard for diagnosing and staging tumours, monitoring treatment progress and tumour recurrence. Extensive usage of this technique in the past decades has resulted in good standardisation and lowering the costs and complexity of the technique, making this a convenient tool for COVID-19 neuropsychiatric research (Alavi et al., Reference Alavi, Werner and Gholamrezanezhad2021).

The FDG-PET scan technique measures cellular glycolytic activity. F-18 Deoxyglucose accumulates in active cells, and thus, this imaging technique can be used to measure changes in regional brain activity in COVID-19. High or lower activity of the brain area is reflected in higher or lower uptake of the FDG, depicted as a metabolic map of the brain. As inflammatory cells are highly glycolytic, sites of ongoing inflammation are characterised by changes in metabolic activity. Profound recruitment of inflammatory cells such as neutrophils and monocytes also results in metabolic acidosis and lowering availability of oxygen (Kominsky et al., Reference Kominsky, Campbell and Colgan2010).

Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common in all stages of COVID-19 (reviews by Tang et al., Reference Tang, Helmeste and Leonard2021, Reference Tang, Leonard and Helmeste2022a). Headache, dizziness, fatigue, cognitive dysfunction such as brain fog and confusion, concentration and memory issues, attention disorder, anxiety and depression, sleep disturbances, hyposmia, anosmia, dysgeusia or ageusia, dysphonia, olfactory dysfunction, numbness and paresthaesia have all been reported (Nataf, Reference Nataf2020; Rogers et al., Reference Rogers, Chesney, Oliver, Pollak, McGuire, Fusar-Poli, Zandi, Lewis and David2020; Attademo & Bernardini, Reference Attademo and Bernardini2021; Boldrini et al., Reference Boldrini, Canoll and Klein2021; Soltani et al., Reference Soltani, Tabibzadeh, Zakeri, Zakeri, Latifi, Shabani, Pouremamali, Erfani, Pakzad, Malekifar, Valizadeh, Zandi and Pakzad2021; Taquet et al., Reference Taquet, Geddes, Husain, Luciano and Harrison2021). In the review by Premraj et al. (Reference Premraj, Kannapadi, Briggs, Seal, Battaglini, Fanning, Suen, Robba, Fraser and Cho2022), which covered 1458 articles and 19 studies, with a total of 11,324 patients, brain fog was found to be as high as 32%, memory issues at 27% and attention disorder at 22%.

It is natural to question if some of the common symptoms in COVID-19, especially in long COVID, such as anxiety and depressed mood, could be psychological (Skyes et al., Reference Skyes, Holdsworth, Jawad, Gunasekera, Morice and Crooks2021), reactive or stress related, due to prolonged social or quarantine isolation, loss of income and other psychosocial causes. Brain imaging studies thus may be useful for the evaluation of vague or seemingly psychological symptoms in COVID-19, distinguishing those of transient and psychological nature, from other symptoms of chronic and organic causes, especially at the mid and long COVID stages.

Data from FDG-PET brain imaging studies of COVID-19 patients have been variable (Meyer et al., Reference Meyer, Hellwig, Blazhenets and Hosp2022). ‘Hypometabolism’ in different brain areas, in different studies, has been reported, but generally in small number of cases. Hypometabolism in the pons was reported in 3 cases with cognitive decline long COVID symptoms (Hugon et al., Reference Hugon, Msika, Queneau, Farid and Paquet2022a) and in the anterior cingulate in another 2 cases with brain fog (Hugon et al., Reference Hugon, Msika, Queneau, Farid and Paquet2022b). Hypometabosim in the right frontal and temporal lobes, including the orbito-frontal cortex and internal temporal areas, was reported in the FDG-PET study of Guedj et al. (Reference Guedj, Campion, Dudouet, Kaphan, Bregeon, Tissot-Dupont, Guis, Barthelemy, Habert, Ceccaldi, Million, Raoult, Cammilleri and Eldin2021a, Reference Guedj, Million, Dudouet, Tissot-Dupont, Bregeon, Cammilleri and Raoult2021b). Asthenia and cardiovascular, digestive and neurological disorders during the acute phase, plus asthenia and language disorders during the chronic phase, were associated with the hypometabolic clusters. Hypometabolism involving bilateral medial temporal lobes, brainstem and cerebellum and the right olfactory gyrus were reported in seven children in the study of Morand et al. (Reference Morand, Campion, Lepine, Bosdure, Luciani, Cammilleri, Chabrol and Guedj2022). In another study consisting of 143 patients, hypometabolic areas were detected in some but not all patients (Verger et al., Reference Verger, Barthel, Tolboom, Fraioli, Cecchin, Albert, van Berckel, Boellaard, Brendel, Ekmekcioglu, Semah, Traub-Weidinger, van de Weehaeghe, Morbelli and Guedj2022a, Reference Verger, Kas, Dudouet, Goehringer, Salmon-Ceron and Guedj2022b).

Sollini et al. (Reference Sollini, Morbelli, Ciccarelli, Cecconi, Aghemo, Morelli, Chiola, Gelardi and Chiti2021) enrolled 13 adults long COVID patients who complained of at least one persistent symptom for more than 30 days after infection recovery. They reported that long COVID patients exhibited brain ‘hypometabolism’ in the right parahippocampal gyrus and thalamus. Specific areas of hypometabolism characterised patients with persistent anosmia/ageusia, fatigue and vascular uptake. However, a German group (Dressing et al., Reference Dressing, Bormann, Blazhenets, Schroeter, Walter, Thurow, August, Hilger, Stete, Gerstacker, Arndt, Rau, Urbach, Rieg, Wagner, Weiller, Meyer and Hosp2022) found no significant changes inregional cerebral glucose metabolism in their 14 patients who underwent FDG PET.

There were suggestions that SARS-CoV-2 may preferentially target the frontal lobes, resulting in behavioural and dysexecutive symptoms, as supported by evidence of fronto-temporal ‘hypoperfusion’ on MRI, EEG slowing in frontal regions and frontal hypometabolism on FDG-PET (Toniolo et al., Reference Toniolo, Scarioni, Di Lorenzo, Hort, Georges, Tomic, Nobili and Frederiksen2021).

Kas et al. (Reference Kas, Soret, Pyatigoskaya, Habert, Hesters, Le Guennec, Paccoud, Bombois, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Carvalho, Sagnes, Dubois, Navarro, Louapre, Stojkovic, Idbaih, Rosso, Grabli, Gales, Millet, Rohaut, Bayen, Dupont, Bruneteau, Lehericy, Seilhean, Durr, Kas, Lamari, Houot, Brochard, Dupont, Lubetzki, Seilhean, Pradat-Diehl, Rosso, Hoang-Xuan, Fontaine, Naccache, Fossati, Arnulf, Durr, Carpentier, Lehericy, Edel, Di Stefano, Robain, Thoumie, Degos, Sharshar, Alamowitch, Apartis-Bourdieu, Peretti, Ursu, Dzierzynski, Bourron, Belmin, Oquendo, Pautas, Verny, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Samson, Leder, Leger, Deltour, Baronnet, Gales, Bombois, Touat, Idbaih, Sanson, Dehais, Houillier, Laigle-Donadey, Psimaras, Alenton, Younan, Villain, Grabli, del Mar Amador, Bruneteau, Louapre, Mariani, Mezouar, Mangone, Meneret, Hartmann, Tarrano, Bendetowicz, Pradat, Baulac, Sambin, Salachas, Le Forestier, Pichit, Chochon, Hesters, Nguyen, Procher, Demoule, Morawiec, Mayaux, Faure, Ewenczyk, Coarelli, Heinzmann, Charles, Stojkovic, Masingue, Bassez, Navarro, An, Worbe, Lambrecq, Debs, Musat, Lenglet, Lambrecq, Hanin, Chougar, Shor, Pyatigorskaya, Galanaud, Leclercq, Demeret, Rohaut, Cao, Marois, Weiss, Gassama, Le Guennec, Degos, Jacquens, Similowski, Morelot-Panzini, Rotge, Saudreau, Millet, Pitron, Sarni, Girault, Maatoug, Gales, Leu, Bayen, Thivard, Mokhtari, Plu, Gonçalves, Bottin, Yger, Ouvrard, Haddad, Ketz, Lafuente, Oasi, Megabarne, Herve, Salman, Rametti-Lacroux, Chalançon, Herve, Royer, Beauzor, Maheo, Laganot, Minelli, Fekete, Grine, Biet, Hilab, Besnard, Bouguerra, Goudard, Houairi, Al-Youssef, Pires, Oukhedouma, Siuda-Krzywicka, Malkinson, Agguini, Douzane, Said and Houot2021) investigated seven patients with variable clinical presentations of COVID-19-related encephalopathy and predominant cognitive and behavioural frontal disorders, at the acute phase, 1 and 6 months after COVID-19 onset. Importantly, SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR in the CSF was negative for all patients. Again, all patients showed ‘hypometabolism’ in a widespread cerebral network, including the frontal cortex, anterior cingulate, insula and caudate nucleus. At 6 months, the majority of patients still had prefrontal, insular and subcortical 18F-FDG-PET/CT abnormalities, with cognitive and emotional disorders of varying severity and attention/executive disabilities and anxio-depressive symptoms (Kas et al., Reference Kas, Soret, Pyatigoskaya, Habert, Hesters, Le Guennec, Paccoud, Bombois, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Carvalho, Sagnes, Dubois, Navarro, Louapre, Stojkovic, Idbaih, Rosso, Grabli, Gales, Millet, Rohaut, Bayen, Dupont, Bruneteau, Lehericy, Seilhean, Durr, Kas, Lamari, Houot, Brochard, Dupont, Lubetzki, Seilhean, Pradat-Diehl, Rosso, Hoang-Xuan, Fontaine, Naccache, Fossati, Arnulf, Durr, Carpentier, Lehericy, Edel, Di Stefano, Robain, Thoumie, Degos, Sharshar, Alamowitch, Apartis-Bourdieu, Peretti, Ursu, Dzierzynski, Bourron, Belmin, Oquendo, Pautas, Verny, Delorme, Corvol, Delattre, Samson, Leder, Leger, Deltour, Baronnet, Gales, Bombois, Touat, Idbaih, Sanson, Dehais, Houillier, Laigle-Donadey, Psimaras, Alenton, Younan, Villain, Grabli, del Mar Amador, Bruneteau, Louapre, Mariani, Mezouar, Mangone, Meneret, Hartmann, Tarrano, Bendetowicz, Pradat, Baulac, Sambin, Salachas, Le Forestier, Pichit, Chochon, Hesters, Nguyen, Procher, Demoule, Morawiec, Mayaux, Faure, Ewenczyk, Coarelli, Heinzmann, Charles, Stojkovic, Masingue, Bassez, Navarro, An, Worbe, Lambrecq, Debs, Musat, Lenglet, Lambrecq, Hanin, Chougar, Shor, Pyatigorskaya, Galanaud, Leclercq, Demeret, Rohaut, Cao, Marois, Weiss, Gassama, Le Guennec, Degos, Jacquens, Similowski, Morelot-Panzini, Rotge, Saudreau, Millet, Pitron, Sarni, Girault, Maatoug, Gales, Leu, Bayen, Thivard, Mokhtari, Plu, Gonçalves, Bottin, Yger, Ouvrard, Haddad, Ketz, Lafuente, Oasi, Megabarne, Herve, Salman, Rametti-Lacroux, Chalançon, Herve, Royer, Beauzor, Maheo, Laganot, Minelli, Fekete, Grine, Biet, Hilab, Besnard, Bouguerra, Goudard, Houairi, Al-Youssef, Pires, Oukhedouma, Siuda-Krzywicka, Malkinson, Agguini, Douzane, Said and Houot2021).

Martini et al. (Reference Martini, Carli, Kiferle, Piersanti, Palumbo, Morbelli, Calcagni, Perani and Sestini2022) studied 26 patients with neurological symptoms using FDG-PET. The ‘fronto-insular cortex’ again emerged as the ‘hypometabolic’ hallmark of neuro-COVID-19. Acute patients showed the most severe hypometabolism affecting several cortical regions. Three-month and 5-month patients showed a progressive reduction of hypometabolism, with limited frontal clusters. After 7–9 months, no brain hypometabolism was detected. Another patient evaluated longitudinally showed a diffuse brain hypometabolism in the acute phase and almost recovered after 5 months. Brain hypometabolism is correlated with cognitive dysfunction, low blood saturation and high inflammatory status. Interestingly, they found ‘hypermetabolism’ in the brainstem, cerebellum, hippocampus and amygdala, which persisted over time and correlated with inflammation status. Goehringer et al. (Reference Goehringer, Bruyere, Doyen, Bevilacqua, Charmillon, Heyer and Verger2022) reported extensive hypometabolic right fronto-temporal clusters in 28 outpatients with post-COVID-19 condition. Those with more symptoms and of longer duration during the initial phase were at higher risk of persistent brain involvement.

The above metabolic changes revealed by FDG-PET may be compared with other inflammatory neuropsychiatric disorders such as encephalitis. For example, Wei et al. (Reference Wei, Tseng, Wu, Su, Weng, Hsu, Chang, Wu, Hsiao and Lin2020) reported frontal-dominant ‘hypometabolism’ in a 66-year-old female patient with anti-AMPAR encephalitis but an occipital-dominant hypometabolism in a 29-year-old female patient with anti-NMDAR encephalitis. Receptor density maps revealed opposite frontal-occipital gradients of AMPAR and NMDAR, which reflect reduced metabolism in the correspondent encephalitis. They suggested that FDG-PET hypometabolic areas may represent receptor hypofunction, with spatial correspondence to receptor distributions of autoimmune encephalitis. In summary, the six features of metabolic anomalies of autoimmune encephalitis included: (a) temporal hypermetabolism, (b) frontal hypermetabolism and (c) occipital hypometabolism in anti-NMDAR encephalitis, (d) hypometabolism in association cortices, (e) sparing of unimodal primary motor cortex and (e) reversibility in recovery. These six features may be used to interpret COVID-19 hypo and hyper metabolic brain changes.

It may be useful to mention the data of Zhao et al. (Reference Zhao, Zhao, Chen, Zhang, Li, Liu, Lv, Wang and Ai2021). They studied 25 patients with anti-LGI1 encephalitis and found subcortical hypermetabolism associated with cortical hypometabolism to be a common metabolic pattern in patients with anti-LGI1 encephalitis. Lagarde et al. (Reference Lagarde, Lepine, Caietta, Pelletier, Boucraut, Chabrol, Milh and Guedj2016) reported cerebral FDG-PET data in six paediatric patients with confirmed anti-NMDAR encephalitis of severe course. Four patients were normal in MRI imaging but all six patients showed extensive, symmetric cortical hypometabolism especially in posterior areas; asymmetric anterior focus of hypermetabolism and basal ganglia hypermetabolism. They also found a good correlation between the clinical severity and the cerebral metabolism changes and serial cerebral FDG-PET showed parallel brain metabolic and clinical improvement.

FDG-PET has proven its value in other neuropsychiatric inflammatory disorders, such as autoimmune encephalitis (Bordonne et al., Reference Bordonne, Chawki, Doyen, Kas, Guedj, Tyvaert and Verger2021), including suspected COVID-19 autoimmune disorders. It may be positioned as an early biomarker of disease so that treatment may be initiated earlier (Solnes et al., Reference Solnes, Jones, Rowe, Pattanayak, Nalluri, Venkatesan, Probasco and Javadi2017).

In summary, brain imaging tools, especially FDG-PET, are useful for the investigation of brain functional changes in COVID-19. The contrasting or conflicting brain imaging results also raised the possibility that brain hypometabolic changes in patients infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus also showed great inter-individual differences, similar to other clinical data such as the percentage of asymptomatic cases. Inflammatory polymorphism again may explain the aberrations.

FDG-PET combined with other technology

Other radioactive ligands to study receptor changes have been proposed as well but the techniques are still in the developing stage. Various techniques have been attempted for the study of neuroinflammation. It would be interesting to mention the study by Brusaferri et al. (Reference Brusaferri, Alshelh, Martins, Kim, Weerasekera, Housman, Morrissey, Knight, Castro-Blanco, Albrecht, Tseng, Zürcher, Ratai, Akeju, Makary, Catana, Mercaldo, Hadjikhani, Veronese, Turkheimer, Rosen, Hooker and Loggia2022), who used simultaneous PET and MRI to study links between pandemic-related stressors and neuroinflammation. The translocator protein TSPO and myoinositol are two glial neuroinflammatory markers that can be detected with PET and MR spectroscopy, respectively. Healthy individuals examined after the enforcement of 2020 lockdown demonstrated elevated brain levels of both neuroinflammatory markers compared to pre-lockdown subjects. Subjects with higher symptom burden showed higher TSPO signal in the hippocampus (mood alteration, mental fatigue), intraparietal sulcus and precuneus (physical fatigue), compared to those reporting little or no symptoms. This raises another complexity in interpretation of brain scan data, which is the confounding nature of psychological reaction and neuroimmune activation in COVID-19. Gouilly et al. (Reference Gouilly, Saint-Aubert, Ribeiro, Salabert, Tauber, Péran, Arlicot, Pariente and Payoux2022) raised a concern in the interpretation of the translocator protein TSPO. He was of the opinion that although neuroinflammation is a significant contributor to Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and that PET imaging of (TSPO) had been widely used to depict the neuroimmune endophenotype of AD, the biological basis of the TSPO PET signal is more related to microglia and astrocytes in AD and might not be directly related to neuroinflammation proper.

Magnetic resonance brain scan

Douaud et al. (Reference Douaud, Lee, Alfaro-Almagro, Arthofer, Wang, McCarthy, Lange, Andersson, Griffanti, Duff, Jbabdi, Taschler, Keating, Winkler, Collins, Matthews, Allen, Miller, Nichols and Smith2022) investigated brain changes in 401 COVID-19 cases who tested positive for infection with SARS-CoV-2 between their two scans, compared to 384 controls. They found reduction in grey matter thickness and tissue contrast in the orbitofrontal cortex and parahippocampal gyrus, changes in markers of tissue damage in regions that are functionally connected to the primary olfactory cortex and reduction in global brain size. There was a greater cognitive decline between the two time points. They proposed a degenerative spread of the disease through olfactory pathways of ‘neuroinflammatory’ events.

Postmortem and animal studies

Matschke et al. (Reference Matschke, Lütgehetmann, Hagel, Sperhake, Schröder, Edler, Mushumba, Fitzek, Allweiss, Dandri, Dottermusch, Heinemann, Pfefferle, Schwabenland, Sumner Magruder, Bonn, Prinz, Gerloff, Püschel, Krasemann, Aepfelbacher and Glatzel2020) reported their postmortem findings in 43 patients (age 51−4). They found fresh territorial ischaemic lesions in six patients and 37 (86%) patients had astrogliosis in all assessed regions. Activation of microglia and infiltration by cytotoxic T lymphocytes was most pronounced in the brainstem and cerebellum, and meningeal cytotoxic T lymphocyte infiltration was seen in 34 (79%) patients. SARS-CoV-2 could be detected in the brains of only about half of the patients, but SARS-CoV-2 viral proteins were found in cranial nerves originating from the lower brainstem and in isolated cells of the brainstem. The presence of SARS-CoV-2 in the CNS was not associated with the severity of neuropathological changes. Thus, neuropathological changes in patients with COVID-19 seem to be mild, with pronounced neuroinflammatory changes in the brainstem being the most common finding.

Fabbri et al. (Reference Fabbri, Foschini, Lazzarotto, Gabrielli, Cenacchi, Gallo, Aspide, Frascaroli, Cortelli, Riefolo, Giannini and D’Errico2021) reported brain ischaemic injuries in 10 postmortem cases. All showed extensive microthrombi and recent infarcts in the basal ganglia and the brainstem. Their findings are in keeping with the hypercoagulable state ending in thrombosis.

Other new animal postmortem studies may shed light on mechanisms underlying COVID neuroinflammation. In a non-human primate model, SARS-CoV-2 virus was found in the olfactory cortex and interconnected regions at 7 days post-infection. Neurocovid here is accompanied by robust neuroinflammation and vascular disruption, with greater brain pathology in aged and diabetic monkeys (Beckman et al., Reference Beckman, Bonillas, Diniz, Ott, Roh, Elizaldi, Schmidt, Sammak, Van Rompay, Iyer and Morrison2022).

Alpha-synuclein, a protein involved in Parkinson’s disease, appears to be an important player in neuronal immune response. Parkinsonism and neurological manifestation of influenza throughout the 20th and the 21st centuries have been discussed (Henry et al., Reference Henry, Smeyne, Jang, Miller and Okun2010). Alpha-synuclein supports type 1 interferon signalling in neurons and its expression restricts RNA viral infection in the brain (Beatman et al., Reference Beatman, Massey, Shives, Burrack, Chamanian, Morrison and Beckham2015; Massey & Beckham, Reference Massey and Beckham2016). Mice lacking alpha-synuclein expression exhibit markedly increased viral growth in the brain, increased mortality and increased neuronal death (Monogue et al., Reference Monogue, Chen, Sparks, Behbehani, Chai, Rajic, Massey, Kleinschmidt-Demasters, Vermeren, Kunath and Beckham2022). In a Syrian golden hamsters COVID model, persistent brain pathology occurred despite the clearance of virus. It seems that viral protein in the nasal cavity led to pronounced microglia activation in the olfactory bulb. Cortical but not hippocampal neurons accumulated hyperphosphorylated tau and alpha-synuclein, in the absence of visible inflammation and neurodegeneration, suggesting selective vulnerability (Käufer et al., Reference Käufer, Schreiber, Hartke, Denden, Stanelle-Bertram, Beck, Kouassi, Beythien, Becker, Schreiner, Schaumburg, Beineke, Baumgärtner, Gabriel and Richter2022). Rosen et al. (Reference Rosen, Kurtishi, Vazquez-Jimenez and Møller2021) have described the numerous similarities between neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease and RNA viral infections, including SARS-CoV-2. Idrees and Kumar (Reference Idrees and Kumar2021) have reported that the SARS-CoV-2 S1 receptor binding domain binds to a number of aggregation-prone, heparin-binding proteins including Aβ, α-synuclein, tau, prion, and TDP-43 RRM. These interactions suggest that the heparin-binding site on the S1 protein might assist the binding of amyloid proteins to the viral surface and thus could initiate aggregation of these proteins, finally leading to neurodegeneration in the brain. Indeed, interactions between SARS-CoV-2 N-protein and α-synuclein have been found to accelerate amyloid formation (Semerdzhiev et al., Reference Semerdzhiev, Fakhree, Segers-Nolten, Blum and Claessens2022). Wu et al. (Reference Wu, Zhang, Huang and Ma2022b) have reported that SARS-CoV-2 proteins caused Lewy-like pathology in the presence of α-synuclein overexpression. It seems wise to continue long-term surveillance of COVID-19 patients to see if susceptible individuals develop further neurodegenerative disorders (Leta et al., Reference Leta, Urso, Batzu, Lau, Mathew, Boura, Raeder, Falup-Pecurariu, van Wamelen and Ray Chaudhuri2022).

Neurotransmitters and receptors in COVID-19

Investigation of neurotransmitter and receptor changes in COVID-19 has not been studied in great detail yet. In vivo brain imaging approaches are limited by the costs and technological complexity of radioisotope ligand labelling beyond the common F18-FDG metabolic scanning approach.

The observation of SSRI antidepressant drugs modulating the severity of COVID-19 has raised interest in the role of serotonin (Attademo & Bernardini, Reference Attademo and Bernardini2021; Ha et al., Reference Ha, Jin, Clemmensen, Park, Mahboob, Gladwill, Lovely, Gottfried-Blackmore, Habtezion, Verma and Ro2021; Sadlier et al., Reference Sadlier, Albrich, Neogi, Lunjani, Horgan, O’Toole and O’Mahony2022) and sigma receptors.

SARS-CoV-2 is likely to induce oxygen dysmetabolism in neuronal cells, and the PET radiotracer [15O]O2 may help us to examine the prevalence of hypoxia in the brain of COVID-19 patients. Fontana et al. (Reference Fontana, Bongarzone, Gee, Souza and Zimmer2020) also proposed the use of other PET tracers to study neurotransmitters and their receptor changes in COVID-19. For example, including [11C]ABP688, for the metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5), [11C]Flumazenil PET radiotracer to access the availability of the α subunits of the GABAA receptor, and [18F]FEOBV for potential cholinergic deficits, [11C]DASB for the serotonin transporter (SERT), [18F]FDOPA as a marker of dopaminergic cells. Neuroinflammatory changes can be assessed, for instance, using [11C]PK11195, a widely used radiotracer to track microglial activation, and [11C]DED, a radiotracer for detecting reactive astrogliosis.

Age, gender and related immune status underlying COVID-19-related neuroinflammation

COVID-19 infection appeared to be only mild to moderate in the majority of healthy individuals but does cause life-threatening disease or persistent symptoms in others. One of the most important determinants of disease severity is age (Brodin, Reference Brodin2021; Costagliola et al., Reference Costagliola, Spada and Consolini2021).

At the early stage of COVID-19, children were thought to be largely immune and if infected, would suffer only mild symptoms (Götzinger et al., Reference Götzinger, Santiago-García, Noguera-Julián, Lanaspa, Lancella, Calò Carducci, Gabrovska, Velizarova, Prunk, Osterman, Krivec, Lo Vecchio, Shingadia, Soriano-Arandes, Melendo, Lanari, Pierantoni, Wagner, L’Huillier, Heininger, Ritz, Bandi, Krajcar, Roglić, Santos, Christiaens, Creuven, Buonsenso, Welch, Bogyi, Brinkmann and Tebruegge2020; Guan et al., Reference Guan, Ni, Hu, Liang, Ou, He, Liu, Shan, Lei, Hui, Du, Li, Zeng, Yuen, Chen, Tang, Wang, Chen, Xiang, Li, Wang, Liang, Peng, Wei, Liu, Hu, Peng, Wang, Liu, Chen, Li, Zheng, Qiu, Luo, Ye, Zhu and Zhong2020). More cases of COVID-19 in children have begun to be reported recently (Nikolopoulou & Maltezou, Reference Nikolopoulou and Maltezou2022). The relatively immature immunological apparatus and thus less tendency for uncontrolled or exaggerated inflammatory response such as cytokine storms (Palmeira et al., Reference Palmeira, Barbuto, Silva and Carneiro-Sampaio2020; Wong et al., Reference Wong, Loo, Kang, Lau, Tambyah and Tham2020; Yasuhara et al., Reference Yasuhara, Kuno, Takagi and Sumitomo2020) was originally claimed to be the explanation. This proves later to be a more complex situation, with an increase in paediatric COVID-19 patients suffering from multi-system inflammation with ominous outcomes (Dufort et al., Reference Dufort, Koumans, Chow, Rosenthal, Muse, Rowlands, Barranco, Maxted, Rosenberg, Easton, Udo, Kumar, Pulver, Smith, Hutton, Blog and Zucker2020; García-Salido et al., Reference García-Salido, de Carlos Vicente, Belda Hofheinz, Balcells Ramírez, Slöcker Barrio, Leóz Gordillo, Hernández Yuste, Guitart Pardellans, Cuervas-Mons Tejedor, Huidobro Labarga, Vázquez Martínez, Gutiérrez Jimeno, Oulego-Erróz, Trastoy Quintela, Medina Monzón, Medina Ramos, Holanda Peña, Gil-Antón, Sorribes Ortí, Flores González, Hernández Palomo, Sánchez Ganfornina, Fernández Romero, García-Besteiro, López-Herce Cid and González Cortés2020; Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Litvinov and Farhat2020; Swann et al., Reference Swann, Holden, Turtle, Pollock, Fairfield, Drake, Seth, Egan, Hardwick, Halpin, Girvan, Donohue, Pritchard, Patel, Ladhani, Sigfrid, Sinha, Olliaro, Nguyen-Van-Tam, Horby, Merson, Carson, Dunning, Openshaw, Baillie, Harrison, Docherty and Semple2020; Wong et al., Reference Wong, Abbas, Liauw, Malisie, Gan, Abid, Efar, Gloriana, Chuah, Sultana, Thoon, Yung and Lee2022).

The new syndrome that occurs in children exposed to COVID-19, called ‘multisystem inflammatory syndrome’ or MIS (Whittaker et al., Reference Whittake, Bamford, Kenny, Kaforou, Jones, Shah, Ramnarayan, Fraisse, Miller, Davies, Kucera, Brierley, McDougall, Carter, Tremoulet, Shimizu, Herberg, Burns, Lyall and Levin2020), is becoming a concern. Childhood MIS reminds us of the well-known Kawasaki disease (Rife & Gedalia, Reference Rife and Gedalia2020). They seem to share some similarities with regard to the pathology and immune responses (Cattalini et al., Reference Cattalini, Della Paolera and Zunica2021; Cheung et al., Reference Cheung, Zachariah, Gorelik, Boneparth, Kernie, Orange and Milner2020; Chen et al., Reference Chen, Kuo, Lee, Chi, Li, Lee and Yang2021; Hernandez et al., Reference Hernandez, Herrera de la Hoz and Lequerica Segrera2021; McCrindle & Manlhiot, Reference McCrindle and Manlhiot2020; Singh-Grewal et al., Reference Singh-Grewal, Lucas, McCarthy, Cheng, Wood, Ostring, Britton, Crawford and Burgner2020; Yasuhara et al., Reference Yasuhara, Kuno, Takagi and Sumitomo2020; Mercier et al., Reference Mercier, Ouldali, Melki, Basmaci, Levy, Titomanlio, Beyler and Meinzer2021; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xu and Du2021). In COVID-19, MIS is now considered as the cytokine storm manifestation in children (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xu and Du2021; Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Pittet and Curtis2021; Brodin, Reference Brodin2022). In this regard, genetic susceptibility to MIS (haploinsufficiency of suppressor of cytokine signalling 1 (SOCS1), a negative regulator of type I and II interferons) has been reported by Chou et al. (Reference Chou, Platt, Habiballah, Nguyen, Elkins, Weeks, Peters, Day-Lewis, Novak, Armant, Williams, Rockowitz, Sliz, Williams, Randolph and Geha2021).

On the other hand, the aged, particularly men, have always been known to be vulnerable, with the greatest risk of requiring intensive care. Their vulnerability may be related to their less effective, inadequate, or unstable immunological systems (Liang, Reference Liang2020; Williamson et al., Reference Williamson, Walker, Bhaskaran, Bacon, Bates, Morton, Curtis, Mehrkar, Evans, Inglesby, Cockburn, McDonald, MacKenna, Tomlinson, Douglas, Rentsch, Mathur, Wong, Grieve, Harrison, Forbes, Schultze, Croker, Parry, Hester, Harper, Perera, Evans, Smeeth and Goldacre2020; Gallo Marin et al., Reference Gallo Marin, Aghagoli, Lavine, Yang, Siff, Chiang, Salazar-Mather, Dumenco, Savaria, Aung, Flanigan and Michelow2021), though some might have pre-existing compromised pulmonary and cardiovascular functions. Obesity, older age, cardiovascular comorbidities, pre-existing pulmonary condition, and chronic kidney disease, among other factors, are all associated with increased risk of hospitalisation, mechanical ventilation and mortality (Feng et al., Reference Feng, Ling, Bai, Xie, Huang, Li, Xiong, Yang, Chen, Lu, Lu, Liu, Chen, Li, Li, Summah, Lin, Yan, Zhou, Lu and Qu2020; Klang et al., Reference Klang, Kassim, Soffer, Freeman, Levin and Reich2020; Williamson et al., Reference Williamson, Walker, Bhaskaran, Bacon, Bates, Morton, Curtis, Mehrkar, Evans, Inglesby, Cockburn, McDonald, MacKenna, Tomlinson, Douglas, Rentsch, Mathur, Wong, Grieve, Harrison, Forbes, Schultze, Croker, Parry, Hester, Harper, Perera, Evans, Smeeth and Goldacre2020). Long COVID, on the other hand, appears to be more prevalent in women than in men (Brodin, Reference Brodin2021; Skyes et al., Reference Skyes, Holdsworth, Jawad, Gunasekera, Morice and Crooks2021).

With regard to the age factor, the immune system undergoes a complex process of maturation from birth to adult age. Differences in the immune and inflammatory response between individuals are important in determining the spectrum of severity of COVID-19. Children show a higher ability to respond to viral infections but a reduced baseline pro-inflammatory state compared with elderly patients.

Exaggerated immune response, especially in the form of a cytokine storm, is associated with high morbidity and mortality (Alunno et al., Reference Alunno, Carubbi and Rodríguez-Carrio2020; Cabler et al., Reference Cabler, French and Orvedahl2020; Sawalha et al., Reference Sawalha, Abozenah, Kadado, Battisha, Al-Akchar, Salerno, Hernandez-Montfort and Islam2021; Sette & Crotty, Reference Sette and Crotty2021; Yang et al., Reference Yang, Tsai, Su and Wu2021). Cytokine storm is itself polymorphic (Alunno et al., Reference Alunno, Carubbi and Rodríguez-Carrio2020). In children, when developed, cytokine storm appeared to be different from that occurring in the adult. The MIS in children 4–6 weeks after infection (Mid COVID) has overlapping features with Kawasaki disease. Autoantibody profiling suggests multiple autoantibodies. The inflammatory response in MIS differs from the cytokine storm of acute COVID-19. While sharing some features with Kawasaki disease, it also differs with respect to T cell subsets, interleukin (IL)-17A, and biomarkers associated with arterial damage (Consiglio et al., Reference Consiglio, Cotugno, Sardh, Pou, Amodio, Rodriguez, Tan, Zicari, Ruggiero, Pascucci, Santilli, Campbell, Bryceson, Eriksson, Wang, Marchesi, Lakshmikanth, Campana, Villani, Rossi, Team, Landegren, Palma and Brodin2020; Brodin, Reference Brodin2022). MIS could be the result of repeated release of viral protein from a SARS-CoV-2 viral reservoir and a superantigen motif of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (Kouo & Chaisawangwong, Reference Kouo and Chaisawangwong2021; Brodin & Arditi, Reference Brodin and Arditi2022; Noval Rivas et al., Reference Noval Rivas, Porritt, Cheng, Bahar and Arditi2022) leading to a broad non-specific T-cell activation.

Treatment

Accepting that inflammation plays a major role in causing morbidity and mortality in COVID-19, treatment naturally focuses on inflammation and immunomodulation at every stage of COVID-19 infection (Rommasi et al., Reference Rommasi, Nasiri and Mirsaeidi2022). Antiviral therapies, anti-ACE-2 and SARS-CoV-2 viral binding/docking agents, thrombosis treatment and cytokine storm management (Stebbing et al., Reference Stebbing, Phelan, Griffin, Tucker, Oechsle, Smith and Richardson2020; Hu et al., Reference Hu, Huang and Yin2021; Karki & Kanneganti, Reference Karki and Kanneganti2021), adjusted to the severity of COVID-19 symptoms are important in this acute stage before the beginning of inflammation, or to advert a full-scale inflammatory response. Anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory therapies continue to be important in the mid stage. Many long COVID symptoms are neuropsychiatric in nature, such as cognitive and memory impairment. Search for new agents or repurposing drugs to reactivate impaired neuronal functions, or hypometabolic brain areas are just in the beginning. Careful neuropsychiatric evaluation, including investigations such as FDE-PET brain scans, may be useful. Reviews of pharmacological treatment of COVID-19 are plentiful (Zheng et al., Reference Zheng, Gao, Wang, Song, Liu, Sun, Xu and Tian2020; García-Lledó et al., Reference García-Lledó, Gómez-Pavón, González Del Castillo, Hernández-Sampelayo, Martín-Delgado, Martín Sánchez, Martínez-Sellés, Molero García, Moreno Guillén, Rodríguez-Artalejo, Ruiz-Galiana, Cantón, De Lucas Ramos, García-Botella and Bouza2022; Rommasi et al., Reference Rommasi, Nasiri and Mirsaeidi2022).

Early-stage Blockade of Viral entry via Spike protein- ACE-2 interaction

At the early viral entry stage, direct elimination of virus with anti-viral drugs and blockade of entry or interference with viral binding to the ACE-2 receptors can be attempted, such as nasal spray-based vaccines. Neutralising antibodies against the Spike protein of the virus, drugs targeting the ACE-2 gene expression and agents that decrease ACE-2 expression in respiratory tract epithelium are in development, including agents that target epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation and epitranscriptomic mechanisms. Removal of excessive cytokines through dialysis to modulate a cytokine storm has also been proposed (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Lee, Yang, Lee, Effenberger, Szpirt, Kronbichler and Shin2021).

Sigma-1 receptor agonists

Ostrov et al. (Reference Ostrov, Bluhm, Li, Khan, Rohamare, Rajamanickam, Bhanumathy, Lew, Falzarano, Vizeacoumar, Wilson, Mottinelli, Kanumuri, Sharma, McCurdy and Norris2021) have reported that highly specific sigma receptor ligands may exhibit anti-viral properties in SARS-CoV-2 infected cells. Preliminary data raised the possibility that some antidepressant drugs such as fluvoxamine, may prevent severe impairment (Gordon et al., Reference Gordon, Jan, Bouhaddou, Xu, Obernier, White, O’Meara, Rezelj, Guo, Swaney, Tummino, Hüttenhain, Kaake, Richards, Tutuncuoglu, Foussard, Batra, Haas, Modak, Kim, Haas, Polacco, Braberg, Fabius, Eckhardt, Soucheray, Bennett, Cakir, McGregor, Li, Meyer, Roesch, Vallet, Kain, Miorin, Moreno, Naing, Zhou, Peng, Shi, Zhang, Shen, Kirby, Melnyk, Chorba, Lou, Dai, Barrio-Hernandez, Memon, Hernandez-Armenta, Lyu, Mathy, Perica, Pilla, Ganesan, Saltzberg, Rakesh, Liu, Rosenthal, Calviello, Venkataramanan, Liboy-Lugo, Lin, Huang, Liu, Wankowicz, Bohn, Safari, Ugur, Koh, Savar, Tran, Shengjuler, Fletcher, O’Neal, Cai, Chang, Broadhurst, Klippsten, Sharp, Wenzell, Kuzuoglu-Ozturk, Wang, Trenker and Young2020; Lenze et al., Reference Lenze, Mattar, Zorumski, Stevens, Schweiger, Nicol, Miller, Yang, Yingling, Avidan and Reiersen2020; Bora et al., Reference Bora, Arikan, Yurtsever, Acar, Delibas and Topal2021; Hoertel et al., Reference Hoertel, Sánchez-Ricó, Vernet, Beeker, Jannot, Neuraz, Elisa, Nicolas, Christel, Alexandre, Guillaume, Mélodie, Ali, Cédric, Guillaume, Anita and Frédéric2021) intubation or death in COVID-19.

It is possible that blockade of viral activities in the ER could be accomplished with molecules targeting the sigma receptor (Hashimoto, Reference Hashimoto2021). Sigma receptor agonists such as fluvoxamine, (Khani & Entezari-Maleki, Reference Khani and Entezari-Maleki2022), Ayahuasca (a folk lore herbal drink containing b-carbolines), N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a sigma agonist (Escobar-Cornejo et al., Reference Escobar-Cornejo, EscobarCornejo and Ramos-Vargas2022) all potentially could be repurposing for the management of SARS-CoV-2 infection by blocking the interaction of the virus with sigma receptor (Vela, Reference Vela2020; Tang et al., Reference Tang, Tang and Leonard2022b).

However, prescribing antidepressants to COVID-19 patients has been cautioned (Borovcanin et al., Reference Borovcanin, Vesic, Balcioglu and Mijailović2022) and antidepressants may also induce dangerous mood switching in patients with mood disorders (see review by Tang et al., Reference Tang, Tang and Leonard2022b).

Other ACE-2 blockers

Apart from sigma-1 receptor molecules, other drugs, molecules and herbal ingredients have also been reported to interfere with the spike protein binding to the ACE-2 receptors and molecular docking technology may identify new and effective agents targeting the viral spike protein, ACE-2 receptors, or both (Gao et al., Reference Gao, Xu and Chen2020; Wang & Yang, Reference Wang and Yang2021; Ye et al., Reference Ye, Luo, Ye, She, Sun, Lu and Zheng2021).

There are interesting reports on cannabinoids from Cannabis Sativa for their anti-covid-19 properties. To date these studies have mostly been restricted to cellular-based in vitro studies (Raj et al., Reference Raj, Park, Cho, Choi, Kim, Ham and Lee2021). The most potent anti-viral properties were shown by tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabindiol (CBD) compared to the reference drugs lopinavir and remdesvir. Unlike THC, because of its non-addictive properties, studies have concentrated on CBD (Corpetti et al., Reference Corpetti, Del Re, Seguella, Palenca, Rurgo, De Conno, Pesce, Sarnelli and Esposito2021; Suryavanshi et al., Reference Suryavanshi, Zaiachuk, Pryimak, Kovalchuk and Kovalchuk2022; Vallée, Reference Vallée2022), which was shown to potently inhibit the ACE-2 receptor via the AKT inflammatory pathway (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Li, Fiselier, Kovalchuk and Kovalchuk2022c). The cannabinoid acids (cannabigerolic acid and cannabiolic acid) have a micromolar affinity for the covid-19 spike protein and were equally effective against the alpha- and beta-SARS-COV2 variants. This may imply that some cannabinoids have the potential to both prevent and treat the covid-19 infection (van Breemen et al., Reference van Breemen, Muchiri, Bates, Weinstein, Leier, Farley and Tafesse2022).

Research on the cannabinoids to treat covid-19 is still in its early stages and detailed clinical studies are essential. However, Nguyen et al. (Reference Nguyen, Yang, Nicolaescu, Best, Ohtsuki, Chen, Friesen, Drayman, Mohamed, Dann, Silva, Gula, Jones, Millis, Dickinson, Tay, Oakes, Pauli, Meltzer, Randall and Rosner2022) reported that patients from the National Covid Cohort Collaborative CBD study showed a significant negative association with the positive covid-19 test for infection.

Anti-inflammatory or inflammation modulatory agents

The role of anti-inflammatory agents as preventive measures and treatment is the main foci in COVID-19 management (Soy et al., Reference Soy, Keser, Atagündüz, Tabak, Atagündüz and Kayhan2020).

Biologics

Most COVID-19 patients, especially among elderly patients, had marked lymphopenia and increased neutrophils, although T cell counts in severe COVID-19 patients surviving the disease may gradually be restored. Elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly IL-6, IL-10, IL-2 and IL-17, and exhausted T cells are found in peripheral blood and the lungs.

It was suggested that convalescent plasma, IL-6 blockade, mesenchymal stem cells and corticosteroids may suppress cytokine storm (Luo et al., Reference Luo, Zhu, Mao and Du2021; Zanza et al., Reference Zanza, Romenskaya, Manetti, Franceschi, La Russa, Bertozzi, Maiese, Savioli, Volonnino and Longhitano2022). Tocilizumab (monoclonal antibody against IL-6 receptors) if given early has been shown to block cytokine storms (Xu et al., Reference Xu, Baylink, Chen, Reeves, Xiao, Lacy, Lau and Cao2020; Gupta et al., Reference Gupta, Wang, Hayek, Chan, Mathews, Melamed, Brenner, Leonberg-Yoo, Schenck, Radbel, Reiser, Bansal, Srivastava, Zhou, Finkel, Green, Mallappallil, Faugno, Zhang, Velez, Shaefi, Parikh, Charytan, Athavale, Friedman, Redfern, Short, Correa, Pokharel, Admon, Donnelly, Gershengorn, Douin, Semler, Hernán and Leaf2021; Kulanthaivel et al., Reference Kulanthaivel, Kaliberdenko, Balasundaram, Shterenshis, Scarpellini and Abenavoli2021). The REMAP-CAP trial evaluated 6 treatment classes for 4689 intensive care COVID-19 patients and confirmed a substantial clinical benefit of the IL-6 receptor antagonists tocilizumab and sarilumab. This same study also was unable to confirm the claimed benefits of convalescent plasma exchange, the anti-malarial hydroxychloroquine (might even be harmful), nor the anti-viral lopinavir and ritonavir (Barnett & Sax, Reference Barnett and Sax2023).

Many other anti-inflammatory and anti-cytokine agents or inflammation-modulating biologics (Jones et al., Reference Jones, Kohn, Pourali, Rajkumar, Gutierrez, Yim and Armstrong2021; Arias et al., Reference Arias, Oliveros, Lechtig and Bustos2022), such as anti-IL-1 agent Anakinra, have been tried in severe COVID. It is quoted that there are more than 150 clinical trials on biologic therapy for COVID-19 in progress (González-Gay et al., Reference González-Gay, Castañeda and Ancochea2021). Optimal brain function depends on TNF. Etanercept, a recombinant inhibitor of TNFα, has been used to modulate the excess TNF level in COVID neuroinflammation, resulting in improvement in cognitive and other brain dysfunctions, depression and fatigue in long COVID (Chen et al., Reference Chen, Yan and Man2020; Clark, Reference Clark2022; Duret et al., Reference Duret, Sebbag, Mallick, Gravier, Spielmann and Messer2020; Tobinick et al., Reference Tobinick, Spengler, Ignatowski, Wassel and Laborde2022).

.

NSAIDs

The benefits of anti-inflammatory agents (Aspirin and other NSAIDs, herbal medicine, and other anti-inflammatory agents) and immune-modulatory agents such as corticosteroids in COVID-19 have been widely reported, though their efficacy and use in different stages still need to be confirmed (Chow et al., Reference Chow, Khanna, Kethireddy, Yamane, Levine, Jackson, McCurdy, Tabatabai, Kumar, Park, Benjenk, Menaker, Ahmed, Glidewell, Presutto, Cain, Haridasa, Field, Fowler, Trinh, Johnson, Kaur, Lee, Sebastian, Ulrich, Peña, Carpenter, Sudhakar, Uppal, Fedeles, Sachs, Dahbour, Teeter, Tanaka, Galvagno, Herr, Scalea and Mazzeffi2021; RECOVERY Collaborative Group et al., Reference Abani, Abbas and Abbas2022; Salah & Mehta, Reference Salah and Mehta2021; Srivastava & Kumar, Reference Srivastava and Kumar2021; Zareef et al., Reference Zareef, Diab, Al Saleh, Makarem, Younis, Bitar and Arabi2022).

Initially, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) had been discouraged for the treatment of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections. In April 2020, French authorities issued warnings regarding the use of ibuprofen with other NSAIDs in patients with COVID-19 symptoms. Moore et al. (Reference Moore, Bosco-Levy, Thurin, Blin and Droz-Perroteau2021) reviewed existing reports on the use of ibuprofen in COVID-19 but was unable to confirm that ibuprofen increased the risk of COVID-19. This was confirmed in many other reports. Ibuprofen continues to be recommended for use in managing COVID-19 symptoms (Poutoglidou et al., Reference Poutoglidou, Saitis and Kouvelas2021).

NSAIDs as a group do not increase the risk and/or severity of COVID-19 (Prada et al., Reference Prada, Santos, Baião, Costa, Ferreira and Caldeira2021; Zhao et al., Reference Zhao, Huang, Huang, Liu, Shao, Mei, Ma, Jiang, Wan, Zhu, Yu and Liu2022). Similarly, the use of NSAIDs was not associated with 30-day mortality, hospitalisation, ICU admission, mechanical ventilation or renal replacement therapy (Lund et al., Reference Lund, Kristensen, Reilev, Christensen, Thomsen, Christiansen, Støvring, Johansen, Brun, Hallas and Pottegård2020). Use of ibuprofen and COX-2 inhibitors was not associated with an increased risk of death (Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Zhao, Gan, Wang, Peng, Li, Liu, Liu, Wang, Shi, Estill, Luo, Wang, Liu and Chen2022). Prior use of NSAIDs was associated with a decreased risk of severe COVID-19, but there is an increased risk of stroke also.

Osborne et al. (Reference Osborne, Veigulis, Arreola, Mahajan, Röösli and Curtin2021) studied patients with and without active aspirin prescription before acquiring SARS-CoV2. They found aspirin users had a significantly decreased risk of mortality after infection. Similar results were reported by many others (Haji Aghajani et al., Reference Haji Aghajani, Moradi, Amini, Azhdari Tehrani, Pourheidar, Rabiei and Sistanizad2021; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Huang, Li, Zhou, Liang, Song, Yang and Zhou2021). However, these observations contradict the results of the RECOVERY trial, which did not find a correlation between aspirin intake and 28-day mortality, nor significant difference in the outcome of mechanical ventilation or death within 28 days of admission (RECOVERY Collaborative Group et al., Reference Abani, Abbas and Abbas2022). The REMAP-CAP trial found aspirin or P2Y12 inhibitors (antiplatelet agents) demonstrated a high likelihood of improving 180-day mortality. Comparatively, anticoagulation with heparin in noncritical disease of moderate severity, but not in critical disease, improved outcomes (Barnett & Sax, Reference Barnett and Sax2023).

The risks of gastric irritation, bleeding, and Reye’s syndrome associated with aspirin usage in children (Schrör, Reference Schrör2007) should all be considered when NSAIDs such as Aspirin and Ibuprofen are administered as anti-inflammatory agents.

COX-2 inhibitors

There is substantial data showing that COX-2 is involved in cytokine storms. COX-2 is induced by cytokines and inflammatory mediators, resulting in the release of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). NSAIDs act via inhibition of COX-1 and 2 activities. This leads to decreased (PGE2) production. The selective COX-2 inhibitor Celecoxib is a popular NSAID. It is metabolised primarily by CYP 2C9. Apart from the long-term cardiovascular and gastrointestinal bleeding risks, many drugs, including psychiatric drugs such as valproic acid, are CYP2C9 substrates or inhibitors, and potential drug–drug interactions may occur. AlAjmi et al. (Reference AlAjmi, Rehman and Celecoxib2021) also cautioned that Celecoxib is a TNFα-converting enzyme (TACE) inhibitor and may aggravate COVID-19. The enzyme TACE is responsible for converting membrane-bound ACE-2 receptors into soluble ACE-2. Inhibition of TACE would lead to an increased population of membrane-bound ACE-2 and may facilitate viral entry. Four drugs (Celecoxib, Glipizide, Lapatinib and Sitagliptin) have been identified as potential inhibitors of TACE. However, their binding affinities are in the micromolar range, which may be outside the normal therapeutic range.

Dexamethasone and other immune-modulating agents

Although the use of glucocorticoids in COVID-19 has been common, the place of glucocorticoids in COVID-19 is complex. Recently, there was a proposal that endogenous glucocorticoids may interfere with the binding of the viral spikes to the ACE-2 receptors (Hardy & Fernandez-Patron, Reference Hardy and Fernandez-Patron2022; Sarker et al., Reference Sarker, Panigrahi, Hardy, Glover, Elahi and Fernandez-Patron2022). There are new in vitro reports demonstrating the effect of corticosteroids on the immune cells, which may be the basis of its action in modulating the cytokine storm (Morrissey et al., Reference Morrissey, Geller, Hu, Tieri, Ding, Klaes, Cooke, Woeste, Martin, Chen, Bush, Zhang, Cavallazzi, Clifford, Chen, Ghare, Barve, Cai, Kong, Rouchka, McLeish, Uriarte, Watson, Huang and Yan2021).

Patients with COVID-19 mount an acute cortisol stress response. High cortisol concentrations have been found to be associated with increased mortality and a reduced median survival. Tan et al. (Reference Tan, Khoo, Mills, Phylactou, Patel, Eng, Thurston, Muzi, Meeran, Prevost, Comninos, Abbara and Dhillo2020b) found that a doubling of cortisol concentration was associated with a significant 42% increase in mortality risk. Güven and Gültekin (Reference Güven and Gültekin2021) reported that very high cortisol levels are associated with severe illness and increased risk of death in ICU patients.

It is important to caution that administration of glucocorticoids may activate Epstein Barr Virus lytic replication through the upregulation of immediate early BZLF1 gene expression (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Webster Marketon, Chen, Lo, Kim and Glaser2010). To mitigate this, designing new ‘dual pan antiviral and anti-cytokine storm agents’ have been proposed (Speck-Planche & Kleandrova, Reference Speck-Planche and Kleandrova2022). General antivirals which act against more than one virus, for example, Epstein Barr Virus (EBV), in addition to COVID-19, have also been investigated, especially if EBV reactivation is responsible for some long COVID symptoms (Gold et al., Reference Gold, Okyay, Licht and Hurley2021). EBV can be reactivated as a result of a variety of stressor events (Sausen et al., Reference Sausen, Bhutta, Gallo, Dahari and Borenstein2021). Long COVID has lower cortisol levels versus controls (Klein et al., Reference Klein, Wood, Jaycox, Lu, Dhodapkar, Gehlhausen, Tabachnikova, Tabacof, Malik, Kamath, Greene, Monteiro, Peña-Hernandez, Mao, Bhattacharjee, Takahashi, Lucas, Silva, Mccarthy, Breyman, Tosto-Mancuso, Dai, Perotti, Akduman, Tzeng, Xu, Yildirim, Krumholz, Shon, Medzhitov, Omer, van Dijk, Ring, Putrino and Iwasaki2022). Su et al. (Reference Su, Yuan, Chen, Ng, Wang, Choi, Li, Hong, Zhang, Xie, Kornilov, Scherler, Pavlovitch-Bedzyk, Dong, Lausted, Lee, Fallen, Dai, Baloni, Smith, Duvvuri, Anderson, Li, Yang, Duncombe, McCulloch, Rostomily, Troisch, Zhou, Mackay, DeGottardi, May, Taniguchi, Gittelman, Klinger, Snyder, Roper, Wojciechowska, Murray, Edmark, Evans, Jones, Zhou, Rowen, Liu, Chour, Algren, Berrington, Wallick, Cochran, Micikas, Wrin, Petropoulos, Cole, Fischer, Wei, Hoon, Price, Subramanian, Hill, Hadlock, Magis, Ribas, Lanier, Boyd, Bluestone, Chu, Hood, Gottardo, Greenberg, Davis, Goldman and Heath2022) have identified multiple early factors which anticipate post-acute COVID-19 sequelae, namely EBV-reactivated auto-antibodies, type 1 diabetes and COVID-19 RNAemia.

The efficacy of glucocorticoids has been tested widely in COVID-19 (Attaway et al., Reference Attaway, Scheraga, Bhimraj, Biehl and Hatipoğlu2021). It is also commonly used to treat anosmia and dysgeusia. It has been reported that those who received fluticasone nasal spray and triamcinolone medications recovered their senses of taste and smell within a week (Singh et al., Reference Singh, Jain and Parveen2021). While this obviously needed to be confirmed, it does support the inflammatory basis of anosmia.

Dexamethasone has been shown to significantly reduce the mortality rate among severe COVID-19 cases (Noreen et al., Reference Noreen, Maqbool and Madni2021). Numerous cases have been reported to benefit from the early use of corticosteroids in reversing the occurrence of cytokine storms (Kolilekas et al., Reference Kolilekas, Loverdos, Giannakaki, Vlassi, Levounets, Zervas and Gaga2020; Wagner et al., Reference Wagner, Griesel, Mikolajewska, Mueller, Nothacker, Kley, Metzendorf, Fischer, Kopp, Stegemann, Skoetz and Fichtner2021). However, Jamaati et al. (Reference Jamaati, Hashemian, Farzanegan, Malekmohammad, Tabarsi, Marjani, Moniri, Abtahian, Haseli, Mortaz, Dastan, Mohamadnia, Vahedi, Monjazebi, Yassari, Fadaeizadeh, Saffaei and Dastan2021) found corticosteroid administration had no clinical benefit in patients with COVID-19. In a more recent review, Zhou et al. (Reference Zhou, Johnson, Rousseau and Rathouz2022b) showed a significant association between dexamethasone use and reduced risk of in-hospital mortality for those not receiving remdesivir and a borderline statistically significant risk for those receiving remdesivir. Similarly, the use of dexamethasone was found to lower 28-day mortality in the RECOVERY Collaborative Group study. However, the benefit occurred only among those who were receiving either invasive mechanical ventilation or oxygen alone but not among those receiving no respiratory support (Horby et al., Reference Horby, Lim, Emberson, Mafham, Bell, Linsell, Staplin, Brightling, Ustianowski, Elmahi, Prudon, Green, Felton, Chadwick, Rege, Fegan, Chappell, Faust, Jaki, Jeffery, Montgomery, Rowan, Edmund Juszczak, Haynes and Landray2021).

Thus, the benefit of corticosteroid treatment remains controversial. Its efficacy, indications, and optimal dosage will need to be examined further (Akter et al., Reference Akter, Araf and Hosen2022).

Colchicine

Colchicine is one of the oldest anti-inflammatory agents (Chiu et al., Reference Chiu, Lo, Shen, Chiu, Aggarwal, Lee, Choi, Lam, Prsic, Chow and Shin2021) and is reported to be useful in COVID-19 to reduce hospitalisation time and mortality rate (Golpour et al., Reference Golpour, Mousavi, Alimohammadi, Mosayebian, Shiran, Alizadeh Navaei and Rafiei2021; Pelechas et al., Reference Pelechas, Drossou, Voulgari and Drosos2021; Vitiello & Ferrara, Reference Vitiello and Ferrara2021). Colchicine can target multiple mechanisms associated with COVID-19’s excessive inflammation. Successful outpatient treatment of COVID-19 with colchicine could greatly reduce morbidity, mortality and the demand for expensive care resources (Reyes et al., Reference Reyes, Hu, Teperman, Wampler Muskardin, Tardif, Shah and Pillinger2021).

Colchicine 1 mg for 1–3 days followed by 0.5 mg/day for 14 days was found to be effective as a proactive anti-inflammatory therapy in hospitalised patients with COVID-19 and viral pneumonia (Mareev et al., Reference Mareev, Orlova, Plisyk, Pavlikova, Akopyan, Matskeplishvili, Malakhov, Krasnova, Seredenina, Potapenko, Agapov, Asratyan, Dyachuk, Samokhodskaya, Mershina, Sinitsyn, Pakhomov, Zhdanova, Mareev, Begrambekova and Kamalov2021).

Histamine and Antihistamine agents in COVID-19

Histamine participates in bidirectional messaging between cytokines and inflammatory cells or their precursors, facilitates migration of cells to inflammatory sites, stimulates lymphocyte activity, modulates aspects of eosinophil, neutrophil and mast cell behaviour and is directly implicated in the generation of cardinal allergic symptoms (Canonica & Blaiss, Reference Canonica and Blaiss2011). In the CNS, microglial activation is regulated by histamine, leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6 and TNF-α (Dong et al., Reference Dong, Zhang, Zeng, Hu, Zhang, He and Zhang2014). Mast cells activated by SARS-CoV-2 release histamine which increases IL-1 levels causing cytokine storm and inflammatory reaction in COVID-19 (Conti et al., Reference Conti, Caraffa, Tetè, Gallenga, Ross, Kritas, Frydas, Younes, Di Emidio and Ronconi2020).

Histamine exerts a complex effect on the immune system through its four histamine GPCRs (G protein-coupled receptors). There are four HRs (1–4 ) known so far (see review by Branco et al., Reference Branco, Yoshikawa, Pietrobon and Sato2018). HR1–3s are widely distributed in neurons, astrocytes and blood vessels. Stimulation of H1R and H2R appear to favour and H3R dampens neuroinflammation through modulation of chemokines production and blood-brain barrier permeability; antagonism of H4R increases inflammatory mediators. The H1-histamine receptor is most clearly associated with modulation of proinflammatory immune cell activity. The second-generation antihistamines such as loratadine, cetirizine, were highly selective for the H1 receptor whereas the third-generation antihistamines, which are either active metabolites (i.e. desloratadine, fexofenadine) or enantiomers (levocetirizine) of second-generation compounds exhibit even more potent H1-receptor antagonist and anti-inflammatory activity than their parent compounds. These new antihistamines are widely used in relieving allergic symptoms clinically and some have been shown to possess anti-inflammatory action as well and tested in COVID-19.

Dual-histamine receptor blockade with cetirizine – famotidine reduces pulmonary symptoms in COVID-19 patients (Hogan et al., Reference Hogan, Hogan, Cannon, Rappai, Studdard, Paul and Dooley2020). Famotidine activates the vagus nerve inflammatory reflex to attenuate cytokine storm (Yang et al., Reference Yang, George, Thompson, Silverman, Tsaava, Tynan, Pavlov, Chang, Andersson, Brines, Chavan and Tracey2022). It is not clear yet whether histamine H1 and H2 antagonists differ in their immunomodulatory efficacy. This will have to be explored in further clinical trials. Reznikov et al. (Reference Reznikov, Norris, Vashisht, Bluhm, Li, Liao, Brown, Butte and Ostrov2021) identified antihistamine candidates by mining electronic health records of more than 219,000 subjects tested for SARS-CoV-2. They found diphenhydramine, hydroxyzine and azelastine to exhibit direct antiviral activity against SARS-CoV-2 in vitro, whereas hydroxyzine, and possibly azelastine, bind Angiotensin Converting Enzyme-2 (ACE2) and the sigma-1 receptors.

There have been discussions about whether antihistamines are also anti-inflammatory (Assanasen & Naclerio, Reference Assanasen and Naclerio2002; Tsicopoulos & Nadai, Reference Tsicopoulos and Nadai2003) because histamine influences cell types that govern immune and inflammatory reactions. The anti-allergic properties of antihistamines usually refer to their ability to inhibit mast cell and basophil activity. These are linked to the early-phase inflammatory reaction. However, more later-generation H1-antihistamines such as desloratadine, were demonstrated to inhibit basophil cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-13 (Schroeder et al., Reference Schroeder, Schleimer, Lichtenstein and Kreutner2001) and capable of intervening at various points in the immune cascade (Agrawal, Reference Agrawal2004; Malone et al., Reference Malone, Tisdall, Fremont-Smith, Liu, Huang, White, Miorin, Olmo, Alon, Delaforge, Hennecker, Wang, Pottel, Smith, Hall, Shapiro, Mittermaier, Kruse, García-Sastre, Roth, Glasspool-Malone and Ricke2020). Reports of favourable responses to histamine receptor antagonists since the beginning of COVID-19 seemed to suggest a mechanism that is distinct from anaphylaxis and likely to be related to histmaine’s effect on the T cells (Kmiecik et al., Reference Kmiecik, Otocka-Kmiecik, Górska-Ciebiada and Ciebiada2012). T cell perturbations have been reported to persist for several months after mild COVID-19 and are associated with long COVID symptoms (Glynne et al., Reference Glynne, Tahmasebi, Gant and Gupta2022).

Antihistamines and glucocorticoids (GCs) are sometimes used together in the treatment of inflammation. Zappia et al. (Reference Zappia, Torralba-Agu, Echeverria, Fitzsimons, Fernández and Monczor2021) have demonstrated that all antihistamines potentiate GCs’ anti-inflammatory effects in vitro, presenting ligand-, cell- and gene-dependent effects. The combination of antihistamines and corticosteroids in COVID-19 should be tested.

Vitamin B12

Using a computational approach, Pandya et al. (Reference Pandya, Shah, M., Juneja, Patel, Gadnayak, Dave, Das and Das2022) demonstrated that vitamin B12 resulted in significant binding with furin. Furin, a protease, has been shown to be important for SARS-CoV-2 infectivity and entry into the host cells in vitro (Essalmani et al., Reference Essalmani, Jain, Susan-Resiga, Andréo, Evagelidis, Derbali, Huynh, Dallaire, Laporte, Delpal, Sutto-Ortiz, Coutard, Mapa, Wilcoxen, Decroly, Nq Pham, Cohen and Seidah2022; Lavie et al., Reference Lavie, Dubuisson and Belouzard2022; Takeda, Reference Takeda2022).

The data of Dalbeni et al. (Reference Dalbeni, Bevilacqua, Teani, Normelli, Mazzaferri and Chiarioni2021) do not support a potential therapeutic role of B12 supplementation without B12 deficiency. On the contrary, they found a potential association between high plasma levels of vitamin B12 and increased risk of mortality. Moreover, the cyanocobalamin fraction of B12 may worsen prognosis of renal insufficiency patients.

Vitamin B12 benefits (Tan et al., Reference Tan, Khoo, Mills, Phylactou, Patel, Eng, Thurston, Muzi, Meeran, Prevost, Comninos, Abbara and Dhillo2020; Wee, Reference Wee2021; Batista et al., Reference Batista, Cintra, Lucena, Manhães-de-Castro, Toscano, Costa, Queiroz, de Andrade, Guzman-Quevedo and Aquino2022) but also may associate with poor outcomes (Dalbeni et al., Reference Dalbeni, Bevilacqua, Teani, Normelli, Mazzaferri and Chiarioni2021. A vitamin D/magnesium/vitamin B12 combination in older COVID-19 patients was associated with a significant reduction in the proportion of patients with clinical deterioration requiring oxygen support, intensive care support, or both. This study supports further larger randomised controlled trials to ascertain the full benefit of this combination in ameliorating the severity of COVID-19 (Tan et al., Reference Tan, Khoo, Mills, Phylactou, Patel, Eng, Thurston, Muzi, Meeran, Prevost, Comninos, Abbara and Dhillo2020).

Vitamin D

There are many reports demonstrating the beneficial usage of vitamin D in COVID-19 (Annweiler et al., Reference Annweiler, Beaudenon, Gautier, Simon, Dubée, Gonsard and Parot-Schinkel2020; Mohan et al., Reference Mohan, Cherian and Sharma2020; Hadizadeh, Reference Hadizadeh2021; Ismailova & White, Reference Ismailova and White2022). Vitamin D was identified as one of the top three molecules showing potential COVID-19 infection mitigation patterns (Glinsky, Reference Glinsky2020). The benefits included fewer rates of ICU admission, few severe cases, mortality events, and RT-PCR positivity (Annweiler et al., Reference Annweiler, Beaudenon, Gautier, Simon, Dubée, Gonsard and Parot-Schinkel2020; Bilezikian et al., Reference Bilezikian, Bikle, Hewison, Lazaretti-Castro, Formenti, Gupta, Madhavan, Nair, Babalyan, Hutchings, Napoli, Accili, Binkley, Landry and Giustina2020; Abdollahi et al., Reference Abdollahi, Sarvestani, Rafat, Ghaderkhani, Mahmoudi-Aliabadi, Jafarzadeh and Mehrtash2021; Bae et al., Reference Bae, Choe, Holick and Lim2022; Ismailova & White, Reference Ismailova and White2022; Shah et al., Reference Shah, Varna, Sharma and Mavalankar2022; Pal et al., Reference Pal, Banerjee, Bhadada, Shetty, Singh and Vyas2022; Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Dantas Damascena, Galvão Azevedo, de Almeida Oliveira and da Mota Santana2022; Varikasuvu et al., Reference Varikasuvu, Thangappazham, Vykunta, Duggina, Manne, Raj and Aloori2022; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Yu, Xie, Huang, Wei and Lei2022).

Vitamin D enhances and modulates the immune system to arrest or dampen damage caused by cytokine storm (Ali, Reference Ali2020; Grant et al., Reference Grant, Lahore, McDonnell, Baggerly, French, Aliano and Bhattoa2020; Mercola et al., Reference Mercola, Grant and Wagner2020; Hadizadeh, Reference Hadizadeh2021). Vitamin D is also neuroprotective (Xu et al., Reference Xu, Baylink, Chen, Reeves, Xiao, Lacy, Lau and Cao2020) and deficiency is associated with increased autoimmunity (multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis as two examples) as well as increased susceptibility to infection (Aranow, Reference Aranow2011).

On the other hand, Vitamin D increases the bioavailability and expression of ACE-2, which may trap and inactivate the virus. In conclusion, vitamin D defends the body against SARS-CoV-2 through a novel complex mechanism that operates through interactions between the activation of both innate and adaptive immunity, ACE-2 expression and inhibition of the RAS system (Peng et al., Reference Peng, Liu, Zheng, Lu, Hou, Zheng, Song, Lu and Chao2021).

Some recommended that people at risk of influenza and/or COVID-19 consider taking a mega dose of 10,000 IU/d of vitamin D3 for a few weeks to rapidly raise 25(OH)D concentrations, followed by 5000 IU/d (Grant et al., Reference Grant, Lahore, McDonnell, Baggerly, French, Aliano and Bhattoa2020). The goal is to raise 25(OH)D concentrations about 40–60 ng/ml) (Bae et al., Reference Bae, Choe, Holick and Lim2022). Oristrell et al. (Reference Oristrell, Oliva, Casado, Subirana, Domínguez, Toloba, Balado and Grau2022) analysed the associations between cholecalciferol or calcifediol supplementation, serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) levels and COVID-19 outcomes in a large population supplemented with cholecalciferol or calcifediol. They observed that those patients supplemented with cholecalciferol or calcifediol achieving serum 25OHD levels ≥ 30 ng/ml had better COVID-19 outcomes.

No studies to date have found that vitamin D affects post-COVID-19 symptoms or biomarkers (Barrea et al., Reference Barrea, Verde, Grant, Frias-Toral, Sarno, Vetrani, Ceriani, Garcia-Velasquez, Contreras-Briceño, Savastano, Colao and Muscogiuri2022).

Herbal medicine

Herbal medicine is popular in many countries and has a long history of usage in viral diseases in the East (Ang et al., Reference Ang, Song, Zhang, Lee and Lee2022; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Ji, Dai, Hei, Liang, Wu, Li, Yang, Mao and Guo2022). Some herbal preparations, especially the Lianhua Qingwen Capsules, have been shown to have therapeutic effects on COVID-19 (Balkrishna et al., Reference Balkrishna, Pokhrel and Varshney2021; Shi et al., Reference Shi, Wu, Yang and Wang2022; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Yu, Xie, Huang, Wei and Lei2022b). Many such herbal preparations contain significant anti-viral and immune-modulating molecules (Boozari & Hosseinzadeh, Reference Boozari and Hosseinzadeh2021; Han et al., Reference Han, Liu, Mo, Chen, Wang, Yang and Wu2021). Lianhua Qingwen Capsules was used previously to treat SARs and later for influenza and other viral infections. They contained a mixture of 11 herbs. The active molecules included quercetin, kaempferol, luteolin, β-sitosterol, indigo, wogoni and other anti-inflammatory and anti-viral compounds. They have modulating effects on multiple immune factors and targets, including ACE-2 receptors (Shen & Yin, Reference Shen and Yin2021).

Natural compounds which interfere with the binding of the viral spike protein to ACE-2 receptors may also be discovered through molecular docking analysis (Gao et al., Reference Gao, Xu and Chen2020; Pokhrel et al., Reference Pokhrel, Bouback, Samad, Nur, Alam, Abdullah-Al-Mamun, Nain, Imon, Talukder, Tareq, Hossen, Karpiński, Ahammad, Qadri and Rahman2021; Wang & Yang, Reference Wang and Yang2021; Ye et al., Reference Ye, Luo, Ye, She, Sun, Lu and Zheng2021). Other natural compounds may induce epigenetic silencing of ACE-2 gene and that includes the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor curcumin, 8-hydroxyquinolones and sulforaphane (Chlamydas et al., Reference Chlamydas, Papavassiliou and Piperi2021).

Conclusion

From the literature review, it appears that there is strong evidence now to support the view that inflammation is an important factor in deciding the pathology, progression, treatment and prognosis of the spectrum of COVID-19 diseases. Inter-individual differences in inflammatory responses determine the symptoms, morbidity and mortality in COVID-19. Anti-inflammatory managment with anti-inflammatory and inflammatory modulatory agents, not currently standard of care in the management of critical COVID-19, may need to be re-examined. We believe that they do occupy an important place throughout the acute, mid and long COVID stage. Preventive measures against the development of long COVID, especially neuro-COVID-19, still await further research and clinical trials with better designs.

Author contribution

All authors contributed equally to this review, conceptually as well as writing.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or non-profit sectors.

Conflict of interest

None.

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