GA_2024_Cureus_16_e60417

Reference

Title : The Potential Risk of Reduced Serum Cholinesterase Activity in COVID-19 Patients Suffering From Cytokine Storm - GA_2024_Cureus_16_e60417
Author(s) : GA MR , Mohammad FK , Merza MA
Ref : Cureus , 16 :e60417 , 2024
Abstract :

Background and objective Several blood biochemical parameters are used to biomonitor coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Reduced serum cholinesterase (ChE) has been suggested to be a predictive indicator of the severity and outcome of COVID-19 infection. This study aimed to examine serum ChE activity in hospitalized and terminally ill COVID-19 patients with cytokine storm and evaluate the enzyme for the in vitro ChE-inhibitory activity of the organophosphate dichlorvos. Methods We determined the serum ChE activity, electrometrically, among hospitalized COVID-19-cytokine storm patients and their non-cytokine storm counterparts. Aliquots of serum samples from healthy volunteers, COVID-19-cytokine storm patients, and non-cytokine storm COVID-19 patients were pooled separately. They were incubated in vitro for 10 minutes with dichlorvos at 0.25 or 0.5 microM. Serum samples from the three groups were subjected to ChE inhibition temporally (5-60 minutes) by 0.25 microM dichlorvos to evaluate the kinetics of enzyme inhibition using steady-state kinetics. Results Of the 165 hospitalized patients with COVID-19, 33 (20%) suffered from the cytokine storm. Serum ChE activity of female COVID-19 patients with cytokine storm was significantly lower than that of the non-cytokine storm counterparts. Risk analysis of reduced serum ChE activity (<=20%) among the 33 COVID-19 patients with cytokine storm compared to 111 non-cytokine storm COVID-19 patients revealed that the former were significantly at risk of reduced enzyme activity. In vitro, dichlorvos at 0.25 microM and 0.5 microM significantly inhibited serum ChE activity in all the groups. The COVID-19-cytokine storm group was the least affected. Dichlorvos at 0.25 microM progressively (5-60 minutes) inhibited serum ChE activity. The inhibition kinetic parameters in COVID-19-cytokine storm patients showed a decrease in the half-life of inhibition (14.54%), inhibition rate (51.46%), and total inhibition time (14.55%). Conclusions Reduced serum ChE in COVID-19 patients with cytokine storm could be adopted as a potential additional laboratory examination tool for bedside risk assessment. The in vitro inhibition profile of serum ChE activity by dichlorvos in COVID-19-cytokine storm patients suggests reduced susceptibility of the enzyme to inhibition. The response of COVID-19 patients to ChE-inhibiting medications should be cautiously evaluated with prior in vitro tests.

PubMedSearch : GA_2024_Cureus_16_e60417
PubMedID: 38882963

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Citations formats

GA MR, Mohammad FK, Merza MA (2024)
The Potential Risk of Reduced Serum Cholinesterase Activity in COVID-19 Patients Suffering From Cytokine Storm
Cureus 16 :e60417

GA MR, Mohammad FK, Merza MA (2024)
Cureus 16 :e60417