Autonomic Dysfunction in Patients with Acute Infection with Coxiella burnetii 2026 Petrovic et al

Andy

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Abstract​

Background: Coxiella burnetii is a common zoonotic pathogen that can lead not only to acute or chronic Q fever but also to post-infectious syndromes, where autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction has been suggested as a contributing mechanism. This study aimed to assess autonomic function in patients presenting with polymorphic symptoms, dysautonomia, or ME/CFS who had serological evidence of acute infection with Coxiella burnetii.

Methods: A total of 156 participants were evaluated, including 100 seropositive patients and 56 matched controls. All subjects underwent standardized cardiovascular reflex tests (CART), beat-to-beat analysis of heart rate and blood pressure with baroreflex indices, 24 h Holter ECG with HRV assessment, and, in the Coxiella group, head-up tilt testing (HUTT).

Results: A significantly higher prevalence of autonomic dysfunction was observed in the Coxiella group, predominantly affecting parasympathetic regulation, with abnormal CART scores, reduced LF power and baroreflex effectiveness, and a high rate of positive HUTT findings characterized by extreme blood pressure variability. Although long-term HRV measures did not differ significantly between groups, short-term indices consistently indicated ANS impairment.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that Coxiella burnetii infection may trigger persistent autonomic dysfunction, potentially contributing to the development of ME/CFS and syncope in affected individuals. Further longitudinal studies are needed to clarify pathophysiological mechanisms and clinical implications.

Open access
 
These findings suggest that Coxiella burnetii infection may trigger persistent autonomic dysfunction, potentially contributing to the development of ME/CFS and syncope in affected individuals.
That seems like a bit of a stretch. «Associated with» might have been fine. To jump to causation is not.
 
That seems like a bit of a stretch. «Associated with» might have been fine. To jump to causation is not.
it’s unclear to me based on the phrasing if they mean the PI-autonomic dysfunction or the infection itself may be casual?
 
it’s unclear to me based on the phrasing if they mean the PI-autonomic dysfunction or the infection itself may be casual?
I agree that it’s a bit unclear, but I read it as «Infection might trigger autonomic dysfunction, and autonomic dysfunction might contribute to ME/CFS»

If they wanted to say that the infection might cause autonomic dysfunction, syncope, and ME/CFS, they could have said it like that with a list.
 
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