BBC Science Focus

COVID-19 can have long-term impacts on the brain

According to a study on nonhuman primates, effects of SARS-CoV-2 infection on the brain include reduced oxygen flow, neuron damage and bleeding

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It has long been noted that COVID-19 patients can suffer from a wide range of neurologic­al symptoms such as headaches, confusion and loss of taste and smell.

They are often the first symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection to arise and can be severe and long-lasting. They also occur indiscrimi­nately in patients, regardless of age or the presence of other medical conditions. But little is known about exactly how the disease affects the brain and central nervous system.

Now, a group of researcher­s at Tulane University in New Orleans, USA, have published the first comprehens­ive study investigat­ing the effects of COVID-19 in the brains of non-human primates.

They found that subjects infected with SARS-CoV-2 showed signs of severe inflammati­on and injury, indicating a reduction in blood or oxygen flow into the brain, neuron damage and small areas of bleeding.

Moreover, this type of damage was also seen in subjects that did not show signs of severe respirator­y disease following infection from the virus, which may provide insight into the range of neurologic­al symptoms associated with long COVID, the researcher­s say.

“Because the subjects didn’t experience significan­t respirator­y symptoms, no one expected them to have the severity of disease that we found in the brain,” said lead author Dr Tracy Fischer, lead investigat­or and associate professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at the Tulane National Primate Research Center.

“But the findings were distinct and profound, and undeniably a result of the infection.”

The study was launched in the spring of 2020 and saw the researcher­s studying brain tissue samples taken from four rhesus macaques and four African green monkeys that had been infected with SARS-CoV-2, along with samples from two uninfected animals of each species that were used as controls.

The findings also mirror those of post-mortem studies carried out in humans who have died of COVID-19, suggesting that rhesus macaques and African green monkeys can accurately act as a model for studying how humans experience the disease, the researcher­s say.

 ?? ?? Even if there are no severe respirator­y symptoms, COVID-19 can affect the brain
Even if there are no severe respirator­y symptoms, COVID-19 can affect the brain

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