Physiological Reports (Apr 2023)
Mechanisms of gas transfer impairment utilizing nitric oxide following severe COVID‐19 pneumonitis
Abstract
Abstract Reduced carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLCO) is common after recovery from severe COVID‐19 pneumonitis. The extent to which this relates to alveolar membrane dysfunction as opposed to vascular injury is uncertain. Simultaneous measurement of nitric oxide diffusing capacity (DLNO) and DLCO can partition gas diffusion into its two components: alveolar–capillary membrane conductance (DmCO) and capillary blood volume (VC). We sought to evaluate DmCO and VC in the early and later recovery periods after severe COVID‐19. Patients attended for post‐COVID‐19 clinical review and lung function testing including DLNO/DLCO. Repeat testing occurred when indicated and comparisons made using t‐tests. Forty‐nine (eight female) subjects (mean ± SD age: 58 ± 13, BMI: 34 ± 8) who had severe COVID‐19 pneumonitis, WHO severity classification of 6 ± 1, and prolonged (21 ± 22 days) hospital stay, were assessed 2 months (61 ± 35 days) post discharge. DLCOadj (z‐score −1.70 ± 1.49, 25/49 LNN. DmCO improved (z‐score −2.05 ± 0.89 vs. −1.41 ± 0.78, p = 0.01) but VC was unchanged (z‐score −2.51 ± 0.55 vs. −2.29 ± 0.59, p = 0.16). Alveolar membrane conductance is abnormal in the earlier recovery phase following severe COVID‐19 but significantly improves. In contrast, reduced VC persists. These data raise the possibility that persisting effects of acute vascular injury may contribute to gas diffusion impairment long after severe COVID‐19 pneumonitis.
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