Association of severity and mortality of Covid-19 cases among acute kidney injury and sexual dimorphism

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Abstract

Introduction: The outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) severely impacted global health and economic status. The native receptor-ligand interaction of Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) and S protein induces host cell pathogenesis via immunosuppression. Material and Methods: The emerging evidence reports the sex disparity in Covid-19 induced mortality rate which affects abundantly men population. Although the biological interaction of Covid-19 with receptor upregulates the viral genome protein interactions and initiates the predictive multiorgan failure followed by acute kidney injury (AKI) in Covid-19 infected male population. Conclusion: Besides, the knowledge and lessons learned from the study depict that cellular and molecular links may explain the risk and severity of Covid-19 and AKI in the male population and lead to management of Covid-19 induced AKI. Therefore, this review explored the pathways associated with the pathogenesis of two diseased conditions with sex disparity.

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Singh, M. K., Jain, M., Shyam, H., Sahu, D. K., Mishra, A., Shankar, P., … Singh, V. (2022, July 1). Association of severity and mortality of Covid-19 cases among acute kidney injury and sexual dimorphism. Molecular Biology Reports. Springer Science and Business Media B.V. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11033-022-07308-1

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