Nearly 6.5 million people have died worldwide from the COVID-19 pandemic. Improvement of pediatric patients survival depends on the continued provision of basic health services to women and children all over the world. The world scientific community must start more scientific clinical investigations and receive more data in order to know the impact of COVID-19 on children`s health andmortality, and to ensure that children and adolescents do not die from preventable events. Such trends in the spread of morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 require an interdisciplinary approach as soon as possible tofurther contain the spread of the disease and prevent complications in order to improve the quality of life. Insufficiently studied molecular changes in lung morpho-biology due to the action of COVID-19 complicate its clinical treatment. An in-depth genetic mechanisms investigation during pathogenetic disorders caused by virus can help in the development of new treatment methods, in articular, the use of surfactant drugs as a component of basic therapy. Recently, it became known that COVID-19-associated lung damage is characterized by typical pathophysiological changes for RDS. Diffuse alveolar damage occurs due to edema of the interstitium, the formation of hyaline membranes, as well as the proliferation of fibroblasts at the stage of recovery. When COVID-19 affects the lungs, surfactantsynthesis is dysregulated, as viral proteins suppress the expression of regulatory genes. Changes during the reparation process also lead to loss of surfactant function. Surfactant replacement therapy can be an alternative in the treatment of patients with COVID-19-associated lung damage, there are a number of studies that prove the effectiveness of such therapy in other infections. COVID-19 can be especially dangerous for children with chronic lung disease, congenital malformations, previously undiagnosed genetic defects in thesurfactant production system. However, timely use of surfactant replacement therapy can prevent one of the worst complications duringmechanical ventilation - air leakage syndrome.
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