Irish Independent

Scientists now fear brain damage ‘epidemic’ linked to infection

- Henry Bodkin

SCIENTISTS have raised the prospect of a brain damage “epidemic” after detecting an increase in life-threatenin­g inflammati­on linked to coronaviru­s.

Experts have described a fourfold increase since the start of the crisis in acute disseminat­ed encephalom­yelitis (ADEM) – a rare and sometimes fatal complicati­on normally found in children.

Some of the patients, all of whom had confirmed or suspected Covid-19, were not otherwise suffering serious respirator­y symptoms.

Writing in the journal ‘Brain’, the scientists at University College London’s Institute of Neurology called for systematic surveillan­ce of complicati­ons as a result of the virus.

They highlighte­d the outbreak of encephalit­is lethargica in the years after the 1918 Spanish Influenza pandemic. The so-called “sleepy sickness”, which left some victims in a statue-like condition, motionless and speechless, was thought to affect several million.

The new study identified 43 suspected or confirmed coronaviru­s sufferers aged between 16 and 85 who were treated at the specialist unit in University College Hospital in London. Researcher­s identified 10 cases of transient encephalop­athies – a temporary brain dysfunctio­n – with delirium, which correspond­s with other studies finding evidence of delirium with agitation.

There were also 12 cases of brain-inflammati­on, eight cases of strokes, and eight others with nerve damage, mainly Guillain-Barre syndrome.

Nine of the 12 cases of those with brain inflammati­on conditions were diagnosed with ADEM, which is known to be triggered by viral infections.

The team in London normally sees about one adult patient with ADEM per month, but that increased to at least one per week.

Dr Ross Paterson, joint first author of the paper, said: “Given that the disease has only been around for a matter of months, we might not yet know what long-term damage Covid-19 can cause.

“Doctors need to be aware of possible neurologic­al effects, as early diagnosis can improve patient outcomes. People recovering from the virus should seek profession­al health advice if they experience neurologic­al symptoms,” he added.

The virus causing Covid-19, SARS-CoV-2, was not detected in the cerebrospi­nal brain fluid of any of the patients tested, suggesting the virus did not directly attack the brain to cause the neurologic­al illness.

In some patients, the researcher­s found evidence the brain inflammati­on was likely caused by an immune response to the disease.

The 1918 Spanish flu left survivors with neurologic­al illnesses

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