AI Article Synopsis

  • - The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted the global population, with higher fatality rates observed among the elderly and those with pre-existing health conditions, prompting an analysis of various coronavirus studies over five decades.
  • - The research identified a strong interconnectedness among keywords related to immune response, nutrition, and inflammation, leading to the conclusion that the immune system operates through a complex, multilevel framework that includes a "self-destroy and rebuild" strategy.
  • - The findings suggest that the immune system’s response to infections, such as COVID-19, might be influenced by nutrition and the processes involved in cellular regeneration, highlighting the importance of strategies like vaccination to mitigate the pandemic's effects.

Article Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, has claimed millions of lives worldwide in the past two years. Fatalities among the elderly with underlying cardiovascular disease, lung disease, and diabetes have particularly been high. A bibliometrics analysis on author's keywords was carried out, and searched for possible links between various coronavirus studies over the past 50 years, and integrated them. We found keywords like immune system, immunity, nutrition, malnutrition, micronutrients, exercise, inflammation, and hyperinflammation were highly related to each other. Based on these findings, we hypothesized that the human immune system is a multilevel super complex system, which employs multiple strategies to contain microorganism infections and restore homeostasis. It was also found that the behavior of the immune system is not able to be described by a single immunological theory. However, one main strategy is "self-destroy and rebuild", which consists of a series of inflammatory responses: 1) active self-destruction of damaged/dysfunctional somatic cells; 2) removal of debris and cells; 3) rebuilding tissues. Thus, invading microorganisms' clearance could be only a passive bystander response to this destroy-rebuild process. Microbial infections could be self-limiting and promoted as an indispensable essential nutrition for the vast number of genes existing in the microorganisms. The transient nutrition surge resulting from the degradation of the self-destroyed cell debris coupled with the existing nutrition state in the patient may play an important role in the pathogenesis of COVID-19. Finally, a few possible coping strategies to mitigate COVID-19, including vaccination, are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867330666230330092725DOI Listing

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