Viana, Airton Idalecio Sousa; https://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K8585148E0&tokenCaptchar=03AFcWeA6sYaZvdEMeVIG_F0BWgi9EKieS094x_cqNMOYlJC6uAZMoUxVXycuj5rGG2P_kcAO65nI3e0RJBq-_bF8QK3oOgeCW9VUTtarqW7JY0svdNwvgK3Spl3olvWLFW6G-og-MSxI3dejalwNExtgS3x5F46hWIUfse4EmuFNq4D1jf1qbqXQmvVmUd9AKiVQ-ubils0tHW75bEv0Q163bE_oVip_xCyGJ2Rszh9coRm5KsFojit8TcZxsisMXImfVYgcb6AGjMyO4N6hlVLKP5X0Wfwr6ZCNJb-VsjhRhUWcIodNs-PsBmcXAQJSVIIubfI2rcGNz0cZIcvrXhZK7Ti-T8S_wkP0NsVsZakblvIB5Zc3b5qFH6g3wukaFbByQeKcssfKJWS9iiJdPHTjw4JQvDcgtzSSp3QNjDY3QirrqcxibJiKm9yH9rEEiNRbKksUHms1kB_O7me6-unwfB3RitdB7et8mwIItsMrJiZhxKlS8kjAa1gl0CaUlkLHNEDctmRrCt04tIiJkwFoW4ycixzUo7NaGEts7vW1OSKI6O5OzizyJ4u_THAcsRA3e0jBvhqTjnx9HGoeRTyKkywcyhxroyW0vWl5KPjQbY-dXdxe_7dpDhj71Im3Voa3Wok6NyJ7nn0Tevv1Fy7pfsr1scARUaeunxBh1lcoNvdmN5QtKwtPnIwb2lRtEHUqudJAlzgEqRwygIUk7VJFnM6hhaWf93f0R1M27-mQrVmaV9rnxQYSbZdB6-COZuy1ENC5a0veMvk6YRWgswE8D9yYvQ0bpCYRTIVM1C_unF4Uzp262LVHvgTI-V3fyWxVicefKT-TCVffY9hNurwIs6LLJkbP3fR0gLyk-Sl2IYsN1Tux1G6yiwyvD0yWNKcpZV0E-vhieqyE9jn8JMZ0mV0Dkh5XBA2LPDH_yWHfWROKnPGXOCXWM7nZfOCwrFmo99W1l0kw43KYBrK01enzzRLo8v7jKtA
Resumo:
he coronavirus epidemic, called SARS-CoV-2, emerged in December 2019 in the city of
Wuhan in China. The infection spread rapidly to other regions of the country and around the
world. In March 2020, the WHO recognized COVID-19 as a pandemic and published a series
of measures aimed at minimizing the spread, infection, and risk of collapse of the global
health system. SARS-Cov-2 belongs to the Coronaviridae family, order Nidovirales, and is an
enveloped virus that contains a single strand of RNA. Clinical manifestations range from mild
to severe cases. The lungs are the main organs affected by SARS-CoV-2, mainly affected by
the dysregulation of innate and acquired immune responses, promoting a cytokine storm,
responsible for inducing a process of hyperinflammation, becoming one of the main causes of
death. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the correlation of cytokines in the
Treg response (IL2, IL10, and TGF-β) with the clinical outcome of patients with COVID-19.
The study consisted of 56 patients admitted to an intensive care unit. Serum samples were
obtained from blood samples and subsequently analyzed by the ELISA method using specific
kits for each cytokine. After the study and statistical applications, the variables TGF-β and
IL2 showed strong positive correlations with the outcome of death, while IL10 showed a
moderate negative correlation with the outcome of death. The above helps us to better
understand the mechanisms that influence the development of the severe stage of the disease
so that we can develop and establish effective methods of controlling and understanding the
pathology.