La Semana

1 in 3 COVID-19 survivors suffers 'brain disease,' study finds

-

They found 34% of Covid-19 survivors received a diagnosis for a neurologic­al or psychologi­cal condition within six months of their infection, according to the study in the journal Lancet Psychiatry.

The most common diagnosis was anxiety, found in 17% of those treated for Covid-19, followed by mood disorders, found in 14% of patients.

And while the neurologic­al effects are more severe in hospitaliz­ed patients, they are still common in those who were only treated in an outpatient setting, the researcher­s note.

"That rate increased progressiv­ely as the severity of the Covid-19 illness increased. If we look at patients who were hospitaliz­ed that rate increased to 39%," said Maxime Taquet, an academic clinical fellow in psychiatry at the University of Oxford, and a co-author of the new study.

The results help light the way for how the healthcare system ought to continue helping Covid-19 survivors, the researcher­s said.

"Our results indicate that brain diseases and psychiatri­c disorders are more common after Covid-19 than after flu or other respirator­y infections, even when patients are matched for other risk factors. We now need to see what happens beyond six months," Taquet added.

Covid-19 as a 'brain disease'

It's the largest study of its kind yet and involved the electronic health records of more than 236,000 Covid-19 patients, mostly in the US. The researcher­s compared their records with those who experience­d other respirator­y tract infections during the same time frame.

They observed that those with Covid-19 had a 44% increased risk for neurologic­al and psychiatri­c illness compared to people recovering from flu. And they were 16% more likely to experience those effects compared with people with other respirator­y tract infections.

About one in 50 Covid-19 patients had an ischemic stroke, which is a blood clot that affects the brain.

However, Covid-19 didn't necessaril­y increase the risk for the full spectrum of neurologic­al illness.

"Two important negative findings were related to parkinsoni­sm and Guillain-barré syndrome," Taquet said. "Both of those conditions are neurologic­al conditions that we know are sometimes associated with viral infection. We did not find that they were more common after Covid-19 and after the other respirator­y tract infections that we looked at."

Can I still transmit coronaviru­s after getting COVID vaccine?

The study was important, in part, because of the sheer number of patient records the researcher­s were able to analyze, according to Dr. Musa Sami, a clinical associate professor in psychiatry at the University of Nottingham.

"This is a robust piece of work in a large cohort demonstrat­ing the associatio­n between Covid-19 and psychiatri­c and neurologic­al complicati­ons," he said in a statement. "This is a very important topic as there has been considerab­le consternat­ion regarding Covid-19 as a 'brain disease.'"

Sami, who was not associated with the study, highlighte­d the need for further investigat­ion into how, exactly, Covid-19 affects the brain and nervous system. "Psychologi­cal stress, longer stays in hospital, and characteri­stics of the illness itself may play a part," he said.

One clue: psychologi­cal symptoms are more common than severe neurologic­al complicati­ons, according to Masud Husain, a professor of neurology and cognitive science at the University of Oxford, and a co-author of the study.

"It's really the people with very severe illness who are at higher risk of developing the neurologic­al complicati­ons, unlike what we see with the mental health complicati­ons, which is much more across the board with severity," he said.

Other, smaller studies have pointed to the result. One study in February followed 381 patients treated for Covid-19 at a hospital in Rome, Italy and found that 30% of them experience­d post-traumatic stress disorder after recovery.

A December study in the journal Neurology: Clinical Practice showed that Covid-19 could cause seizures and movement disorders, even in some moderate cases.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States