Platelets (Nov 2020)

A proof of evidence supporting abnormal immunothrombosis in severe COVID-19: naked megakaryocyte nuclei increase in the bone marrow and lungs of critically ill patients

  • Luca Roncati,
  • Giulia Ligabue,
  • Vincenzo Nasillo,
  • Beatrice Lusenti,
  • William Gennari,
  • Luca Fabbiani,
  • Claudia Malagoli,
  • Graziana Gallo,
  • Silvia Giovanella,
  • Massimo Lupi,
  • Tiziana Salviato,
  • Ambra Paolini,
  • Matteo Costantini,
  • Tommaso Trenti,
  • Antonio Maiorana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2020.1810224
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 8
pp. 1085 – 1089

Abstract

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a global public health emergency with many clinical facets, and new knowledge about its pathogenetic mechanisms is deemed necessary; among these, there are certainly coagulation disorders. In the history of medicine, autopsies and tissue sampling have played a fundamental role in order to understand the pathogenesis of emerging diseases, including infectious ones; compared to the past, histopathology can be now expanded by innovative techniques and modern technologies. For the first time in worldwide literature, we provide a detailed postmortem and biopsy report on the marked increase, up to 1 order of magnitude, of naked megakaryocyte nuclei in the bone marrow and lungs from serious COVID-19 patients. Most likely related to high interleukin-6 serum levels stimulating megakaryocytopoiesis, this phenomenon concurs to explain well the pulmonary abnormal immunothrombosis in these critically ill patients, all without molecular or electron microscopy signs of megakaryocyte infection.

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