Oral lesions with immunohistochemical evidence of Sars‐CoV‐2 in swab‐negative post‐COVID syndrome

Author:

Limongelli Luisa1,Favia Gianfranco1,Maiorano Eugenio2ORCID,D'Amati Antonio2ORCID,Pispero Alberto3,Ingravallo Giuseppe2,Barile Giuseppe1,Tempesta Angela1ORCID,Dell'Olio Fabio1ORCID,Siciliani Rosaria Arianna1,Capodiferro Saverio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Complex Operating Unit of Odontostomatology Aldo Moro University Bari Italy

2. Department of Emergency and Organ Transplantation, Operating Unit of Pathological Anatomy Aldo Moro University Bari Italy

3. Department of Biomedical, Surgical, and Dental Sciences University of Milan Milan Italy

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesGrowing evidence exists about post‐COVID condition/syndrome as sequelae of Sars‐CoV‐2 infection in healed patients, possibly involving the lungs, brain, kidney, cardiovascular and neuromuscular system, as well the persistency of taste dysfunction. Such symptoms develop during or after infection and continue for more than 12 weeks with pathogenesis related to virus persistency but variable by organs or systems.Materials and MethodsWe recently observed six patients recovered from COVID‐19 and with negative RT‐PCR testing, showing oral mucosa lesions (mainly ulcers) overlapping those occurring in the acute phase, persisting up to 20 days and thus needing a biopsy with histological investigation and spike protein evaluation by immunohistochemistry.ResultsWe found epithelial ulceration, inflammatory infiltrate, vessels with increased diameter and flattened endothelium but no thrombi formation; also, we found a weak epithelial SARS‐CoV‐2 positivity limited to the basal/spinosum layers, progressively decreasing toward the periphery, and the intraepithelial lymphomonocytes, endothelium, and perivascular pericytes too.ConclusionsOur findings provide evidence that SARS‐CoV‐2 can persist, as for other organs/systems, also in the oral epithelium/mucosa after the acute phase and can be responsible for lesions, although by a pathogenetic mechanism that should be better defined but certainly referable as the oral mucosa counterpart of post‐COVID syndrome.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Dentistry,Otorhinolaryngology

Reference42 articles.

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2. Oral cavity lesions as a manifestation of the novel virus (COVID‐19)

3. Ayoubkhani D. P. &Gaughan C.(2021).Technical article: Updated estimates of the prevalence of post‐acute symptoms among people with coronavirus (COVID‐19) in the UK: 26 April 2020 to 1 August 2021. Data and Analysis from Census 2021.

4. Oral lesions in COVID‐19 infection: Is long‐term follow‐up important in the affected patients?

5. Oral lesions in patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection: could the oral cavity be a target organ?

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