BBC Science Focus

COVID-19 AND THE BRAIN: DOES THE VIRUS CAUSE PSYCHIATRI­C PROBLEMS?

COVID-19 patients face a higher risk of psychiatri­c disorders. It that because of the social impacts of the pandemic or is the virus finding its way into our brains?

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“Out of the 62,000 people who were diagnosed with COVID-19 in the study’s cohort, one in five went on to receive a diagnosis for depression, anxiety or insomnia”

The lockdown and social-distancing measures applied around the world to manage the pandemic have led to high rates of mental health problems, including depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This makes sense: we know that social isolation can have negative psychologi­cal consequenc­es, as can economic uncertaint­y, rising

unemployme­nt and widespread financial struggles.

Aside from the social and economic effects of the pandemic, could catching COVID-19 lead to mental health problems? And if so, would it mean that the

virus was finding its way into our brains?

Using data from 69 million individual­s in America, researcher­s at the University of Oxford compared people diagnosed with COVID-19 to those suffering

from different health problems, such as the flu or

another respirator­y infection. This approach enabled

them to rule out the possibilit­y of any findings being

attributed to the impact of being seriously ill or being admitted to hospital.

“We know when people have been ill [with a non-COVID-related illness], they’re more likely to develop mental health problems than if they

had not been ill in the first place,” explains

Paul Harrison, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Oxford who was involved in the research and the lead author of the study that

came out of it. “We wanted to find out if there was something specific about COVID-19 that makes

that risk greater than it would have been if you’ve

been ill for some other reason. And we did find that was the case.”

Out of the 62,000 people who were diagnosed with

COVID-19 in the study’s cohort, one in five went

on to receive a diagnosis for depression, anxiety or insomnia following their illness. Some of the cohort had previously had a psychiatri­c diagnosis for one of these conditions, but 1 in 20 patients was

experienci­ng mental health problems for the first

time in their life following infection with the new coronaviru­s.

Those with COVID-19 were twice as likely to get one of these psychiatri­c diagnoses compared to the other patients. Being hospitalis­ed with COVID-19 put all patients at higher risk, but even a mild form of the illness was associated with developing mental health problems in the three months following diagnosis.

The researcher­s did notice a significan­t difference in the mental health impacts of having any health problems after 1 April 2020, when America’s coronaviru­s death toll surpassed that of the Vietnam War. Having any illness after that date came with a higher risk of being diagnosed with a psychiatri­c condition. The researcher­s attribute this to contextual factors, such as a fear of being admitted to hospital and catching COVID-19, or knowing health services were already overwhelme­d.

But even if there is a link between COVID-19 and an increased risk of psychiatri­c disorders, what mechanism could be behind it?

“There are certainly viruses that infect our brains and cause very serious problems, even death. But equally, there are lots of common viruses where that doesn’t seem to happen. The straight answer is we just don’t know yet which COVID-19 could

be,” says Harrison.

Previous studies have sought to identify how other viruses can get into the brain and the body’s central nervous system. Patients hospitalis­ed with two other coronaviru­ses, SARS and MERS, were found to have almost a one in three chance of developing PTSD, and 15 per cent of patients had depression and/or anxiety a year after their illness. Harrison says that there could be many non-biological reasons for this.

“Your life has been affected; you may have lost your job, had problems paying the rent, you might have been worried that you’re not going to get better,” he says. “In addition, there may be biological mechanisms. Because you’ve gotten ill, that may have triggered an immune reaction in your body, for example. We know that the immune response can sometimes get into the brain and affect the way we feel and the way our brains function.”

Several viruses are known to infect the central nervous system, affecting the brain and spinal cord in the process. These include the virus

that causes influen\a, the measles virus and the human immunodefi­ciency virus HIV , as well as

coronaviru­ses.

While studies looking at the effects of the COVID-19 coronaviru­s on the central nervous system are still

ongoing, initial findings from the C-/O4' Capturing

Multi-Organ Effects of COVID-19) study have used magnetic resonance imaging to detect tissue changes in parts of the brain. Another study, by scientists at Temple University, in Pennsylvan­ia, has shown how the spike proteins found on the coronaviru­s can

inflame cells on a model of the blood-brain barrier,

causing the barrier to become ‘leaky’ and potentiall­y disrupting the brain’s delicate neural networks.

“It’s easy to speculate that COVID-19 might be doing some things, particular­ly in our brains, to cause depression and anxiety, but that’s just a hypothesis,” says Harrison. “We need to do other kinds of studies, which are now underway, to see if that’s true. Of course, if it is true, then we need to think of treatments that could either prevent that

happening in the first place, or could help patients

deal with it if it does happen.”

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 ??  ?? BELOW COVID-19 can have physical and mental effects on the people who catch it
BELOW COVID-19 can have physical and mental effects on the people who catch it
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