Long COVID-19 and diabetes mellitus: a short review
Saula Vigili de Kreutzenberg
Metabolism and Target Organ Damage ›› 2023, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (1) : 4
The persistence of Covid-19 infection for more than four weeks after the acute phase is defined as the long Covid-19 syndrome. This condition, otherwise defined by the persistence of signs and symptoms for more than 12 weeks, shares several features with diabetes mellitus: diabetes mellitus and Covid-19 infections have a pandemic dimension, are characterized by an inflammatory milieu, and show a bidirectional relationship. Diabetic patients appear more likely to develop long Covid-19 syndrome than non-diabetic individuals. The chronicity of Covid-19 favors the development of new cases of diabetes. In this short review, we discuss the evidence supporting the link between Covid-19 and diabetes mellitus, focusing on the epidemiological and pathophysiological aspects of this dangerous relationship.
Highlights
● Patients affected by diabetes both type 1 and type 2 seem more likely to develop a long Covid-19 syndrome compared to non-diabetic subjects;
● Long Covid-19 syndrome is associated with new-onset cases of diabetes, both type 1 and type 2 higher than expected;
● Presence of other comorbidities prior to acute Covid-19 infection favors the development of long Covid-19 syndrome;
● Most frequent symptoms of long Covid-19 in diabetic patients are fatigue, shortness of breath, neurocognitive and neurological manifestations, and cardiovascular sequelae;
● Long Covid-19 can exacerbate microvascular dysfunction in patients with diabetes.
Post-COVID / diabetes mellitus / long Covid-19 pathophysiological mechanisms
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