HYPERTENSION, DIABETES MELLITUS, AND OBESITY AS THE MAIN COMORBIDITY FACTORS OF MORTALITY IN COVID-19 PATIENTS: A LITERATURE REVIEW

Main Article Content

Luh Ade Dita Rahayu
Jannatul Cahya Admiyanti
Yumna Iftinan Khalda
Fatikha Rudia Ahda
Nur Feby Febiana Agistany
Sastraningsih Setiawati
Nabila Indah Shofiyanti
Cut Warnaini

Abstract

Background: COVID-19 patients with comorbid diseases have a higher mortality rate than patients without congenital diseases. The most common comorbids found in COVID-19 patients are diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and obesity. The prevalence of COVID-19 patients with diabetes mellitus reached 41.7%, hypertension reached 56.6%, and obesity reached 41.7%.


Methods: The method used in this paper is literature review from various references and focused on the correlation of comorbid with the risk of death in COVID-19 patients. The references are being retrieved from NCBI and Google Scholar. Overall, 21 sources were used which were obtained from various data bases including PubMed, ScienceDirect, Researchgate, and WHO.


Discussion: There is an increase in ACE-2 expression which causes a high susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 infection on COVID-19 patient with hypertension. Impaired T-cell function and increased levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6) also play an important role in increasing the severity on COVID-19 patient with diabetes. Obesity can cause abnormalities in the secretion of cytokines, adipokines, and inferferon which will disrupt the immune system in the human body.


Conclusion: The complex pathophysiological mechanisms of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and obesity as comorbid in COVID-19 patients increase the severity and mortality risk.

Article Details

How to Cite
Rahayu, L., Admiyanti, J., Khalda, Y., Ahda, F., Agistany, N. F., Setiawati, S., Shofiyanti, N., & Warnaini, C. (2021). HYPERTENSION, DIABETES MELLITUS, AND OBESITY AS THE MAIN COMORBIDITY FACTORS OF MORTALITY IN COVID-19 PATIENTS: A LITERATURE REVIEW. JIMKI: Jurnal Ilmiah Mahasiswa Kedokteran Indonesia, 9(1), 90-97. https://doi.org/10.53366/jimki.v9i1.342
Section
Article Review
Author Biography

Cut Warnaini, Mataram University

dr. Cut Warnaini, MPH

Public Health Department Faculty of Medicine Mataram University