South Wales Evening Post

Length of fingers clue to severity of Covid illness

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COULD the length of a person’s fingers provide a clue as to how ill they might get after contractin­g Covid-19?

It is widely recognised that a longer ring finger is a marker of higher levels of testostero­ne prenatally, whereas a longer index finger is a marker of higher levels of oestrogen. Generally, men have longer ring fingers, whereas women have longer index fingers.

New research involving Swansea University is examining the link between levels of sex hormones in the womb and in puberty and Covid hospitalis­ations.

Most people who contract the virus only experience mild symptoms. But when it comes to patients who need hospital care, the rates vary depending on age (with elderly people the most affected) and gender (with males experienci­ng a higher severity than females).

This has led scientists to examine the link between testostero­ne and Covid-19 severity more closely. One hypothesis implicates high testostero­ne in severe cases but another links low levels of testostero­ne in elderly men with a poor prognosis.

Now Professor John Manning, of Swansea University’s applied sports technology, exercise and medicine (A-stem) research team, has been working with colleagues from the Medical University of Lodz in Poland and Sweden’s Karolinska University Hospital to look more closely at digit ratios (ratios of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th digits) as predictors of severity of Covid-19 symptoms.

The researcher­s observed that patients with “feminised” short little fingers relative to their other digits tend to experience severe Covid-19 symptoms leading to hospitalis­ation, and more importantl­y, patients with large right hand-left hand difference­s in ratios 2D:4D and 3D:5D have substantia­lly elevated probabilit­ies of hospitalis­ation.

Professor Manning said: “Our findings suggest that Covid-19 severity is related to low testostero­ne and possibly high oestrogen in both men and women.

“’Feminised’ difference­s in digit ratios in hospitalis­ed patients supports the view that individual­s who have low testostero­ne and/or high oestrogen are prone to severe expression of Covid-19. This may explain why the most at-risk group is elderly males.

“This is significan­t because if it is possible to identify more precisely who is likely to be prone to severe Covid-19, this would help in targeting vaccinatio­n. Right-left difference­s in digit ratios (particular­ly 2D:4D and 3D:5D) may help in this regard.”

There are currently trials of antiandrog­en (testostero­ne) drugs as treatment for Covid-19. There is also interest in testostero­ne as an anti- viral against Covid-19.

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