Author: Gallelli, Luca; Zhang, Leiming; Wang, Tian; Fu, Fenghua
Title: Severe Acute Lung Injury Related to COVIDâ€19 Infection: A Review and the Possible Role for Escin Cord-id: akenl8r9 Document date: 2020_5_22
ID: akenl8r9
Snippet: Acute lung injury (ALI) represents the most severe form of the viral infection sustained by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). Today, it is a pandemic infection, and even if several compounds are used as curative or supportive treatment, there is not a definitive treatment. In particular, antiviral treatment used for the treatment of several viral infections (eg, hepatitis C, HIV, Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome–coronavirus) are today used with a mild or moderate effect on the lun
Document: Acute lung injury (ALI) represents the most severe form of the viral infection sustained by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). Today, it is a pandemic infection, and even if several compounds are used as curative or supportive treatment, there is not a definitive treatment. In particular, antiviral treatment used for the treatment of several viral infections (eg, hepatitis C, HIV, Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome–coronavirus) are today used with a mild or moderate effect on the lung injury. In fact, ALI seems to be related to the inflammatory burst and release of proinflammatory mediators that induce intraâ€alveolar fibrin accumulation that reduces the gas exchange. Therefore, an addâ€on therapy with drugs able to reduce inflammation, edema, and cell activation has been proposed as well as a treatment with interferon, corticosteroids or monoclonal antibodies (eg, tocilizumab). In this article reviewing literature data related to the use of escin, an agent having potent antiâ€inflammatory and antiâ€viral effects in lung injury, we suggest that it could represent a therapeutic opportunity as addâ€on therapy in ALI related to COVIDâ€19 infection.
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