Highlights
Decrease in %LUC (Large unstained cells%) value predicts severe SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Laboratory parameters associated with the severe illness in COVID-19 patients.
The optimal cut-off values of relevant parameters to define risk of critical illness.
The relevant coagulation abnormalities to predict severe patients with COVID-19.
In GCT-positive pregnant individuals, the glucose load increases oxidative stress by changing the thiol/disulfide homeostasis. Such an effect is not observed in healthy pregnancies.
Welders’ lung disease refers to mixed exposure to different kinds of metals and chemicals from welding fumes, which affect all parts of the respiratory tract including airways and parenchyma together. This study aimed to investigate the oxidative status in patients with welders’ lung (PWL) by means of thiol-disulfide homeostasis and ischemia-modified albumin (IMA) levels. The male welder workers diagnosed with welders’ lung disease and healthy individuals were recruited in the study. Plasma levels of disulfide, disulfide/native thiol ratio, disulfide/total thiol ratio, IMA, and catalase (CAT) were determined. Pulmonary function test parameters of both groups were compared. The thiol-disulfide homeostasis parameters of PWL and control group were as follows: disulfide (20.5 ± 6.3 vs. 16.2 ± 3.9 μmol L−1, p < 0.001), disulfide/native thiol (4.36 (1.59) vs. 4.0 (1.64), p = 0.024), and disulfide/total thiol (4.01 (1.34) vs. 3.71 (1.41), p = 0.024). IMA levels in PWL were significantly higher than the control group (1.37 (0.27) mg dL−1 vs. 0.49 (0.61) mg dL−1, p < 0.001), whereas CAT activities were significantly higher in the control group (106.6 (54.5) kU L−1 vs. 78.3 (67.8) kU L−1, p = 0.003). The findings of the present study revealed that oxidative stress plays a key role in the pathogenesis of welders’ lung disease. Plasma thiol-disulfide homeostasis and IMA levels might be indicators of oxidative stress in PWL.
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