Iraqi Journal of Medical Sciences






   
Vol. 22 Issue 1 January - June / 2024
Published on website | Date : 2024-06-02 11:23:30

Interference of Coronavirus with Glucose Metabolism and Its Effect on Affinity of Hemoglobin Binding to Oxygen: A Review

Nadia Gh. AbdulKareem, Fatima A. Mohammad


Abstract

Early phases of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) are characterized by hypoxemic arteries that do not result in gasping, clinical deterioration may occur rapidly if hypoxemia is exacerbated by intra-pulmonary forcing, pulmonary vaso-compression fitness is not managed, and intravascular microthrombi are present with impaired lung diffusion. The goal of this hypothesis is to propose that COVID-19 may interfere with the glycolytic pathway by changing the amounts of intracellular metabolites, especially 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG), to aid in the release of oxygen from hemoglobin into the tissues, therefore preventing or treating hypoxia.
As a conclusion, focusing on hypoxia as the primary cause of severe morbidity in COVID-19 patients is thought to result from an increased stability of the relax (R-form) of hemoglobin at the tissue level due to a decrease in glucose metabolite produced from glycolysis process in RBCs (decrease 2,3-BPG concentration in the blood). This theory proposes raising 2,3-BPG levels, which is to free up more O2 from the R-form of Hb in the tissues.
Keywords: COVID-19, glucose metabolism, hemoglobin- oxygen binding, 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate
Citation: AbdulKareem NGh, Mohammad FA. Interference of Coronavirus with glucose metabolism and its effect on affinity of hemoglobin binding to oxygen: A review. Iraqi JMS. 2024; 22(1): 1-12. doi: 10.22578/IJMS.22.1.1


Full-text