Potential pathophysiological mechanisms leading to increased COVID-19 susceptibility and severity in obesity

Author:

Belančić Andrej,Kresović Andrea,Rački Valentino

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference17 articles.

1. The mutual effects of COVID-19 and obesity;Abbas;Obes. Med.,2020

2. The effect of lipopolysaccharide-induced obesity and its chronic inflammation on influenza virus-related pathology;Ahn;Environ. Toxicol. Pharmacol.,2015

3. Regulation of angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) in obesity: implications for COVID-19;Al Heialy;bioRxiv,2020

4. Evidence that vitamin d supplementation could reduce risk of influenza and covid-19 infections and deaths;Grant;Nutrients,2020

5. COVID-19 and vitamin D—is there a link and an opportunity for intervention?;Jakovac;Am. J. Physiol. Metab.,2020

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