Association of circulating muscle-derived myokines irisin and myostatin with COVID-19 severity
Cyryl Daroszewski, Jędrzej Grzegrzółka, Monika Kosacka, Anna Brzecka-Bonnaud

TL;DR
This study explores how muscle-derived proteins irisin and myostatin relate to the severity of COVID-19 in hospitalized patients.
Contribution
The study identifies associations between circulating myokines and clinical outcomes in SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Findings
Higher irisin levels at admission correlate with severe clinical condition and inflammation in COVID-19 patients.
Elevated myostatin levels are linked to severe disease and poor oxygenation at discharge.
Irisin levels decline with clinical improvement, while myostatin levels remain stable in most patients.
Abstract
Skeletal muscles secrete myokines, including irisin and myostatin, which regulate inflammation and metabolism and may influence the severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection. This study investigated the associations between serum irisin and myostatin levels and COVID-19 severity. Ninety-nine adult patients hospitalized with PCR-confirmed COVID-19 were included. Serum irisin and myostatin concentrations were measured by ELISA at admission and discharge. Disease severity was evaluated using a four-point clinical scale, the RALE score for lung involvement, oxygenation indices (PaO2/FiO2 and SaO2/FiO2), and inflammatory markers (MMP-9, ferritin, S100B, CRP, D-dimers, NLR, PLR, and SII). Higher irisin concentrations at admission were associated with more severe clinical condition, increased systemic inflammation, impaired oxygenation, and greater lung involvement. Elevated irisin levels were linked…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdipose Tissue and Metabolism · Muscle Physiology and Disorders · Sirtuins and Resveratrol in Medicine
