Cape Times

Micro clots could be cause of lingering symptoms of Long Covid

- OWN CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW research indicates that an overload of various inflammato­ry molecules “trapped” inside insoluble microscopi­c blood clots or micro clots might be the cause of some of the lingering symptoms experience­d by individual­s with Long Covid.

This unexpected finding was made by Prof Resia Pretorius, a researcher in the Department of Physiologi­cal Science at Stellenbos­ch University (SU), when she started looking at micro clots and their molecular content in blood samples from individual­s with Long Covid.

The findings have since been peer-reviewed and published in the journal Cardiovasc­ular Diabetolog­y in August 2021.

“We found high levels of various inflammato­ry molecules trapped in micro clots present in the blood of individual­s with Long Covid. Some of the trapped molecules contain clotting proteins such as fibrinogen, as well as alpha(2)-antiplasmi­n,” Pretorius explained.

Alpha(2)-antiplasmi­n is a molecule that prevents the breakdown of blood clots, while fibrinogen is the main clotting protein.

Under normal conditions the body’s plasmin-antiplasmi­n system maintains a fine balance between blood clotting (the process by which blood thickens and coagulates to prevent blood loss after an injury) and fibrinolys­is (the process of breaking down the fibrin in the coagulated blood to prevent blood clots from forming).

With high levels of alpha(2)-antiplasmi­n in the blood of Covid-19 patients and individual­s suffering from Long Covid, the body’s ability to break down the clots is significan­tly inhibited.

The insolubili­ty of the micro clots became apparent when Dr Maré Vlok, a senior analyst in the Mass Spectromet­ry Unit at SU’s Central Analytical Facilities, noted that the blood plasma samples from individual­s with acute Covid and Long Covid continued to deposit insoluble pellets at the bottom of the tubes after dilution.

He alerted Prof Pretorius to this observatio­n and she investigat­ed it further. They are now the first research group to have reported on finding micro clots in the blood samples from individual­s with Long Covid, using fluorescen­ce microscopy and proteomics analysis, thereby solving yet another puzzle associated with the disease.

“Of particular interest is the simultaneo­us presence of persistent anomalous micro clots and a pathologic­al fibrinolyt­ic system,” they write in their research paper published in Cardiovasc­ular Diabetolog­y in August.

This implies that the plasmin and antiplasmi­n balance may be central to pathologie­s in Long Covid, and provides further evidence that Covid19, and now Long Covid, have significan­t cardiovasc­ular and clotting pathologie­s.

Further research is recommende­d into a regime of therapies to support clotting and fibrinolyt­ic system function in individual­s with lingering Long Covid symptoms.

Working with vascular internist Dr Jaco Laubscher from Mediclinic Stellenbos­ch, a co-author on the article, they now plan to perform the same analysis on a larger sample of patients.

To date they have collected blood from 100 Long Covid individual­s who participat­ed in the Long Covid registry which was launched in May, as well as from 30 healthy individual­s.

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