International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Dec 2021)

Persistent IgG anticardiolipin autoantibodies are associated with post-COVID syndrome

  • Daniel Bertin,
  • Elsa Kaphan,
  • Samuel Weber,
  • Benjamin Babacci,
  • Robin Arcani,
  • Benoit Faucher,
  • Amélie Ménard,
  • Alexandre Brodovitch,
  • Jean Louis Mege,
  • Nathalie Bardin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 113
pp. 23 – 25

Abstract

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Persistence of various symptoms in patients who have recovered from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was recently defined as ‘long COVID’ or ‘post-COVID syndrome’ (PCS). This article reports a case of a 58-year-old woman who, although recovering from COVID-19, had novel and persistent symptoms including neurological complications that could not be explained by any cause other than PCS. In addition to a low inflammatory response, persistence of immunoglobulin G anticardiolipin autoantibody positivity and eosinopenia were found 1 year after acute COVID-19 infection, both of which have been defined previously as independent factors associated with the severity of COVID-19. The pathophysiological mechanism of PCS is unknown, but the possibility of persistence of the virus, especially in the nervous system, could be suggested with a post-infectious inflammatory or autoimmune reaction.

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