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Selective visuoconstructional impairment following mild COVID-19 with inflammatory and neuroimaging correlation findings

Authors :
de Paula, Jonas Jardim
Paiva, Rachel E. R. P.
Souza-Silva, Nathália Gualberto
Rosa, Daniela Valadão
Duran, Fabio Luis de Souza
Coimbra, Roney Santos
Costa, Danielle de Souza
Dutenhefner, Pedro Robles
Oliveira, Henrique Soares Dutra
Camargos, Sarah Teixeira
Vasconcelos, Herika Martins Mendes
de Oliveira Carvalho, Nara
da Silva, Juliana Batista
Silveira, Marina Bicalho
Malamut, Carlos
Oliveira, Derick Matheus
Molinari, Luiz Carlos
de Oliveira, Danilo Bretas
Januário, José Nélio
Silva, Luciana Costa
De Marco, Luiz Armando
Queiroz, Dulciene Maria de Magalhaes
Meira, Wagner
Busatto, Geraldo
Miranda, Débora Marques
Romano-Silva, Marco Aurélio
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry; 20220101, Issue: Preprints p1-11, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

People recovered from COVID-19 may still present complications including respiratory and neurological sequelae. In other viral infections, cognitive impairment occurs due to brain damage or dysfunction caused by vascular lesions and inflammatory processes. Persistent cognitive impairment compromises daily activities and psychosocial adaptation. Some level of neurological and psychiatric consequences were expected and described in severe cases of COVID-19. However, it is debatable whether neuropsychiatric complications are related to COVID-19 or to unfoldings from a severe infection. Nevertheless, the majority of cases recorded worldwide were mild to moderate self-limited illness in non-hospitalized people. Thus, it is important to understand what are the implications of mild COVID-19, which is the largest and understudied pool of COVID-19 cases. We aimed to investigate adults at least four months after recovering from mild COVID-19, which were assessed by neuropsychological, ocular and neurological tests, immune markers assay, and by structural MRI and 18FDG-PET neuroimaging to shed light on putative brain changes and clinical correlations. In approximately one-quarter of mild-COVID-19 individuals, we detected a specific visuoconstructive deficit, which was associated with changes in molecular and structural brain imaging, and correlated with upregulation of peripheral immune markers. Our findings provide evidence of neuroinflammatory burden causing cognitive deficit, in an already large and growing fraction of the world population. While living with a multitude of mild COVID-19 cases, action is required for a more comprehensive assessment and follow-up of the cognitive impairment, allowing to better understand symptom persistence and the necessity of rehabilitation of the affected individuals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13594184 and 14765578
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs59957370
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-022-01632-5