1. Reactive Astrocytosis—A Potential Contributor to Increased Suicide in Long COVID-19 Patients?
- Author
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Costanza, Alessandra, Amerio, Andrea, Aguglia, Andrea, Rossi, Martina, Parise, Alberto, Magnani, Luca, Serafini, Gianluca, Amore, Mario, Martins, Daniel, and Nguyen, Khoa D.
- Subjects
POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,SUICIDE risk factors ,COVID-19 ,SUICIDAL behavior ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Background: Long COVID-19 is an emerging chronic illness of significant public health concern due to a myriad of neuropsychiatric sequelae, including increased suicidal ideation (SI) and behavior (SB). Methods: This review provides a concise synthesis of clinical evidence that points toward the dysfunction of astrocytes, the most abundant glial cell type in the central nervous system, as a potential shared pathology between SI/SB and COVID-19. Results: Depression, a suicide risk factor, and SI/SB were both associated with reduced frequencies of various astrocyte subsets and complex proteomic/transcriptional changes of astrocyte-related markers in a brain-region-specific manner. Astrocyte-related circulating markers were increased in depressed subjects and, to a less consistent extent, in COVID-19 patients. Furthermore, reactive astrocytosis was observed in subjects with SI/SB and those with COVID-19. Conclusions: Astrocyte dysfunctions occurred in depression, SI/SB, and COVID-19. Reactive-astrocyte-mediated loss of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) integrity and subsequent neuroinflammation—a factor previously linked to SI/SB development—might contribute to increased suicide in individuals with long COVID-19. As such, the formulation of new therapeutic strategies to restore astrocyte homeostasis, enhance BBB integrity, and mitigate neuroinflammation may reduce SI/SB-associated neuropsychiatric manifestations among long COVID-19 patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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