Ultracellular Imaging of Bronchoalveolar Lavage from Young COVID-19 Patients with Comorbidities Showed Greater SARS-COV-2 Infection but Lesser Ultrastructural Damage Than the Older Patients

Author:

Chaudhary Shikha1,Rai Preeti1,Joshi Arti1,Yadav Pooja2,Sesham Kishore1,Kumar Shailendra3,Mridha Asit Ranjan2,Baitha Upendra4,Nag Tapas Chandra1,Soni Kapil Dev5,Trikha Anjan3,Yadav Subhash Chandra1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Electron Microscope Facility, Department of Anatomy, , New Delhi, Delhi 110029, India

2. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Department of Pathology, , New Delhi, Delhi 110029, India

3. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Department of Anaesthesiology, Pain Medicine and Critical Care, , New Delhi, Delhi 110029, India

4. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Department of Medicine, , New Delhi, Delhi 110029, India

5. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Anaesthesia and Critical Care, JPN Apex Trauma Center, , New Delhi, Delhi 110029, India

Abstract

Abstract In this study, we examined the cellular infectivity and ultrastructural changes due to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection in the various cells of bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF) from intubated patients of different age groups (≥60 years and <60 years) and with common comorbidities such as diabetes, liver and kidney diseases, and malignancies. BALF of 79 patients (38 cases >60 and 41 cases <60 years) were studied by light microscopy, immunofluorescence, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy to evaluate the ultrastructural changes in the ciliated epithelium, type II pneumocytes, macrophages, neutrophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes, and anucleated granulocytes. This study demonstrated relatively a greater infection and better preservation of subcellular structures in these cells from BALF of younger patients (<60 years compared with the older patients (≥60 years). The different cells of BALF from the patients without comorbidities showed higher viral load compared with the patients with comorbidities. Diabetic patients showed maximum ultrastructural damage in BALF cells in the comorbid group. This study highlights the comparative effect of SARS-CoV-2 infection on the different airway and inflammatory cells of BALF at the subcellular levels among older and younger patients and in patients with comorbid conditions.

Funder

IUSSTF Indo-US Virtual Network for the COVID-19 program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Instrumentation

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