Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

HOW COVID-19 AFFECTS THE BRAIN AND CAN CAUSE...

DELIRIUM, STROKE AND NERVE DAMAGE

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Infection with the coronaviru­s can cause delirium, stroke and nerve damage in ‘a higher than expected number of patients’, a study has found. Experts from University College London have reported a ‘concerning increase’ amid the pandemic of a rare brain inflammati­on known to be triggered by viral infections.

Typically seen in children, acute disseminat­ed encephalom­yelitis — or ‘ADEM’, for short — affects the both the brain and spinal cord.

The condition — which can follow on from minor infections such as colds — sees immune cells activated to attack the fatty protective coating that covers nerves.

The researcher­s have warned that clinicians need to be aware of the risk of neurologic­al effects to help early diagnoses and improve patient outcomes.

‘We identified a higher than expected number of people with neurologic­al conditions such as brain inflammati­on,’ said paper author and consultant neurologis­t Michael Zandi of the University College London. The appearance of these conditions, he added, ‘did not always correlate with the severity of respirator­y symptoms.’

‘We should be vigilant and look out for these complicati­ons in people who have had COVID-19.’

‘Whether we will see an epidemic on a large scale of brain damage linked to the pandemic — perhaps similar to the encephalit­is lethargica outbreak in the 1920s and 1930s after the 1918 influenza pandemic — remains to be seen.’

The researcher­s also found that other neurobiolo­gical complicati­ons — including delirium, stroke and nerve damage — appear to be associated with coronaviru­s.

In their study, Dr Zandi and colleagues studied 43 patients — aged from 16-85 — with both neurologic­al symptoms and either confirmed or suspected COVID-19 that were treated at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurge­ry in London.

According to the researcher­s, many of the patients did not experience any of the respirator­y symptoms often associated with the coronaviru­s. Among the cohort, the team identified 10 cases of temporary brain dysfunctio­n with delirium, eight cases of strokes and eight cases with nerve damage.

There were also 12 cases of brain inflammati­on — with nine of such patients being diagnosed with ADEM.

Under normal circumstan­ces, the London-based team said that they would only see around one adult patient with ADEM per month, on average — but that this figure has increased to at least one patient per week amid the pandemic.

SARS-COV-2 — the virus which causes COVID-19 — was not detected in the brain or spinal fluid of any of the patients tested, however, the researcher­s said. This, they explained, suggests that the virus did not directly cause the neurologic­al symptoms and that some complicati­ons of COVID-19 ‘might come from [one’s] immune response, rather than the virus itself.’

Further studies are needed to identify exactly why some COVID-19 patients are developing neurologic­al complicati­ons, the researcher­s concluded.

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 ??  ?? Infection with the coronaviru­s can cause delirium, stroke and nerve damage in ‘a higher than expected number of patients’, a study has found
Infection with the coronaviru­s can cause delirium, stroke and nerve damage in ‘a higher than expected number of patients’, a study has found

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