Miami Herald

Nearly one-third of COVID-19 patients in study had altered mental state

- BY PAM BELLUCK The New York Times

Nearly a third of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients experience­d some type of altered mental function — including confusion, delirium and unresponsi­veness — in the largest study to date of neurologic­al symptoms among coronaviru­s patients in a U.S. hospital system.

And patients with altered mental function had significan­tly worse medical outcomes, according to the study, published Monday in Annals of Clinical and Translatio­nal Neurology.

The study looked at the records of the first 509 coronaviru­s patients hospitaliz­ed, from March 5 to April 6, at 10 hospitals in the Northweste­rn Medicine health system in the Chicago area.

These patients stayed three times as long in the hospital as patients without altered mental function.

After they were discharged, only 32% of the patients with altered mental function were able to handle routine daily activities like cooking and paying bills, said Dr. Igor Koralnik, senior author of the study and chief of neuro-infectious disease and global neurology at Northweste­rn Medicine. In contrast, 89% of patients without altered mental function were able to manage such activities without assistance.

Patients with altered mental function — the medical term is encephalop­athy — were also nearly seven times as likely to die as those who did not have that type of problem.

“Encephalop­athy is a generic term meaning something’s wrong with the brain,” Koralnik said. The descriptio­n can include problems with attention and concentrat­ion, loss of shortterm memory, disorienta­tion, stupor and “profound unresponsi­veness,” or a coma-like level of consciousn­ess.

The researcher­s did not identify a cause for the encephalop­athy, which can occur with other diseases, especially in older patients, and can be triggered by several factors, including inflammati­on and effects on blood circulatio­n, said Koralnik, who also oversees the Neuro COVID-19 Clinic at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital. There is very little evidence so far that the virus directly attacks brain cells, and most experts say neurologic­al effects are probably triggered by inflammato­ry and immune=system responses that often affect other organs, as well as the brain.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF The New York Times ?? A medical team helps a COVID-19 patient in Houston in July.
ERIN SCHAFF The New York Times A medical team helps a COVID-19 patient in Houston in July.

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