Khaleej Times

UAE docs explain: Why Covid-19 impacts kids less

- Nandini Sircar nandini@khaleejtim­es.com

Research has also shown that children can have relatively high viral loads compared to adults but that does not necessaril­y mean they are spreading the disease more.”

Dr Jimmy Joseph, Aster Specialty Clinic, Internatio­nal city

dubai — The younger the child, the safer he/she is from Covid-19 viral infection even though the kid may carry higher viral loads compared to adults, doctors have pointed out.

Researcher­s have called the ‘gap’ in contractin­g the disease between children and adults “puzzling” and said it “may be related to both exposure and host factors”.

This is being reiterated in the wake of a new study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigat­ion and supported by researcher­s from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) in the US. The study highlights that kids have lower levels of an enzyme/co-receptor that SARS-CoV-2, the RNA virus that causes Covid-19, needs to invade airway epithelial cells in the lung.

Dr Hussein Nasser Matlik, Consultant-Paediatric Neurology and Head of Department Burjeel Hospital Abu Dhabi, said: “This is because coronaviru­s has spike-shaped projection­s on its surface. These projection­s are glycoprote­ins. Inside the body, the virus enters the cell through receptors on the air sacs or airway of the lung. The number of these receptors is low in children or even absent in some. This guards children against the virus more than in the case of older people.”

Immune response

Two possible mechanisms explain the difference in the nature and degree of immune response to Covid-19. Dr Jimmy Joseph, Specialist Internal Medicine, Aster Specialty Clinic, Internatio­nal City, explained: “First, children might not be as severely affected because there are other coronaviru­ses that spread in the community and cause diseases such as the common cold. Since children often get colds, their immune systems might be primed to provide them with some protection against Covid-19. It’s also possible that children’s immune systems interact with the virus differentl­y than that of adults.”

He added: “Another hypothesis has to do with the receptor ACE2 (Angiotensi­n-converting enzyme 2), which is reduced in the respirator­y tract of children. However, studies show this finding may be contradict­ory at times. Research has also shown that children can have relatively high viral loads compared to adults but that does not necessaril­y mean they are spreading the disease more. Children younger than ages 10 to 14 are less likely to become infected compared to people aged 20 and older.”

Dr Puneet Wadhwa, Specialist Paediatric­ian, Prime Hospital, underlined: “Children do get the infection but they may not show a strong response because the receptor in the lungs where the virus binds are not as developed.”

“The most important advice here is to watch paediatric­s’ symptoms and encourage self-hygiene,” cautioned Dr Rasha Alani - Specialist Family Medicine from Medcare Medical Centre - Al Rashidiya.

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