This is true of some patients and not others, but it is a common feature. It is largely missed because there are so few autopsies done these days to truly look at a tissue and cellular level when you have something that is presumed, in the first place, to be a respiratory virus and the member of a pre-existing family about which much is known and has been studied. Dr. Fowkes was a real pioneer and was instrumental in drawing attention to this more unique aspect that COVID-19 has a heavier predominance of these complications than other respiratory viruses, like the original SARS. Whether or not it is a key determinant of survival will be quite variable, but it will cause damage that increases vulnerability and will compound the consequences of other illnesses involving these target organs, including a reinfection with the COVID-19 virus. The patient will simply be more vulnerable and more likely to have a worse round of illness, assuming that any immunity gained by the first go-round was modest or has waned sufficiently to make the person vulnerable to reinfection.
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