Vascular mechanisms of post-COVID-19 conditions: Rho-kinase is a novel target for therapy
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy

Abstract
In post-coronavirus disease-19 (post-COVID-19) conditions (long COVID), systemic vascular dysfunction is implicated, but the mechanisms are uncertain, and the treatment is imprecise.
Patients convalescing after hospitalization for COVID-19 and risk factor matched controls underwent multisystem phenotyping using blood biomarkers, cardiorenal and pulmonary imaging, and gluteal subcutaneous biopsy (NCT04403607). Small resistance arteries were isolated and examined using wire myography, histopathology, immunohistochemistry, and spatial transcriptomics. Endothelium-independent (sodium nitroprusside) and -dependent (acetylcholine) vasorelaxation and vasoconstriction to the thromboxane A2 receptor agonist, U46619, and endothelin-1 (ET-1) in the presence or absence of a RhoA/Rho-kinase inhibitor (fasudil), were investigated. Thirty-seven patients, including 27 (mean age 57 years, 48% women, 41% cardiovascular disease) 3 months post-COVID-19 and 10 controls (mean age 57 years, 20% women, 30% cardiovascular disease), were included. Compared with control responses, U46619-induced constriction was increased (
Patients with post-COVID-19 conditions have enhanced vascular fibrosis and myosin light change phosphorylation. Rho-kinase activation represents a novel therapeutic target for clinical trials.
Contributors

Robert A Sykes
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Karla B Neves
Author

Rhéure Alves-Lopes
Author

Ilaria Caputo
Author

Kirsty Fallon
Author

Nigel B Jamieson
Author

Assya Legrini
Author

Holly Leslie
Author

Alasdair McIntosh
Author

Alex McConnachie
Author

Andrew Morrow
Author

Richard W McFarlane
Author

Kenneth Mangion
Author
Golden Jubilee National Hospital Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

John McAbney
Author

Augusto C Montezano
Author

Rhian M Touyz
Author

Colin Wood
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Colin Berry
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

