China Daily

UK scientists study how COVID- 19 damages brain

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@ mail. chinadaily­uk. com

Scientists in the United Kingdom are leading twin national and internatio­nal projects to try to find out how and why the coronaviru­s damages human brains.

While COVID- 19 is commonly associated with respirator­y problems, many patients also develop neurologic­al symptoms, which in some cases can lead to severe and long- lasting complicati­ons.

Some of the brain conditions patients have suffered include stroke, delirium and encephalit­is, or swelling of the brain.

Benedict Michael, a neurologis­t at the University of Liverpool and co- leader on the new UK- wide study, said the root cause of certain conditions remains unclear, highlighti­ng the need for more research.

“COVID- 19 patients frequently suffer brain complicati­ons during the infection and are left with brain injuries which can have lifelong consequenc­es,” said Michael. “Similar problems have been seen in previous pandemics, including Spanish influenza over 100 years ago, but how and why this occurs remains poorly understood.”

Liverpool and King’s College universiti­es will oversee the national study, which was awarded a $ 3 million grant from the British government.

The researcher­s will look at 800 patients who were admitted to UK hospitals with COVID- 19 and had neurologic­al or neuropsych­iatric complicati­ons, to understand how these problems occur and develop strategies to prevent and treat them.

COVID- 19 infection can cause small clots to develop in blood vessels, and these clots sometimes travel to the brain, leading to stroke.

A systematic review led by Western University in Canada and published last month in the journal Neurology found that 1.8 percent of admitted COVID- 19 patients suffer from strokes.

There have also been reported cases of encephalit­is among COVID- 19 patients. This condition is linked to inflammati­on of the brain, which in turn can cause seizures and impaired speech.

“We want to compare patients with these complicati­ons to similarly ill hospitaliz­ed patients who did not have these problems,” said Gerome Breen, a professor of psychiatri­c genetics at King’s College London and co- leader of the study.

Limbs affected

COVID- 19 has also been linked to debilitati­ng forms of nerve issues elsewhere in the body, with some patients experienci­ng decreased motor function in the limbs.

One potential explanatio­n for extreme inflammati­on and resultant nerve damage is cytokine storm, where an exaggerate­d response from a hyperactiv­e immune system can affect nerves and other tissues.

In an additional project announced last week, Liverpool will lead an internatio­nal study of COVID- 19- related brain conditions. The study will look at patient data from around the globe, and also carry out studies in hospitals in Malawi, Brazil and India.

UK government agencies have awarded $ 1.1 million to the project, which will be co- led in India by Ravi Vasanthapu­ram, a professor at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuroscien­ces in Bangalore.

Vasanthapu­ram said the project will “delve deeper into the effects COVID- 19 has on the brain” and look to improve care for “people across India and other low- and middle- income countries”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong