Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Even mild COVID-19 cases can cause brain changes

- Karen Weintraub

A new study provides the most conclusive evidence yet that COVID-19 can damage the brain, even in people who weren’t severely ill.

The study, published Monday in Nature, used before-and-after brain images of 785 British people, ages 51 to 81, to look for any changes. About half the participan­ts contracted COVID-19 between the scans – mostly when the alpha variant was circulatin­g – which left many people at least temporaril­y without a sense of smell.

Analysis of the images from the UK Biobank showed that people infected with COVID-19 had a greater reduction in their brain volumes overall and performed worse on cognitive tests than those who had not been infected.

The 15 participan­ts who were sick enough with COVID-19 to require hospitaliz­ation showed the most brain changes, but even those who had much milder disease showed differences, the study found. The oldest participan­ts had more changes on average than younger ones.

The brain areas most affected were those related to smell, which makes sense, since many of the people infected around the world lost their sense of smell, said Gwenaëlle Douaud, who led the research. People who lose their smell for prolonged periods also lose volume in brain areas related to smell. “Lose it or use it,” said Douaud, a neuroscien­tist at Oxford University.

If smell recovers, usually the brain region does, too, she said.

Loss of smell is one of the earliest signs of impending illness with diseases such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, said Dr. Ronald Petersen, who directs the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging. The olfactory structure involved in smell “lives next door” to a memory structure in the brain, he said.

The cause of the changes hasn’t been determined, but they may partly be the result of the virus entering the brain or causing an inflammatory or immune response that indirectly changes the brain, Douaud said.

It’s possible, she said, that the omicron variant, which seems to have less effect on sense of smell, triggered fewer brain changes than earlier variants, but it’s too soon to know.

Douaud said that because brain changes appeared to increase with age in her group, she thinks younger people will probably have less damage, if any.

Dr. George Vavougios, a neuroscien­tist at the University of Cyprus, said it’s too early to know for certain. Many people who complained of smell loss or distortion­s after infection were younger or previously healthy.

In his outpatient clinic, he sees no difference in brain complaints among people who contracted the alpha, beta or delta variants. Of those with each variant, 40% to 50% noticed cognitive impairment­s since their infection.

Petersen said he was struck by the fact that even people with milder cases of COVID-19 showed brain changes, and he was surprised that the changes were dramatic enough over five or six months to be detectable on brain scans.

The study spurred him to want to look at brain scans from his own research into aging to see whether he can detect similar changes. “Larger studies could shed light on this,” he said.

USA TODAY health coverage is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare.

 ?? NAKAMURA/GETTY IMAGES GO ?? Gabriel Cervera Rodriguez examines a patient’s MRI images in the COVID-19 intensive care unit at Houston’s United Memorial Medical Center in 2020.
NAKAMURA/GETTY IMAGES GO Gabriel Cervera Rodriguez examines a patient’s MRI images in the COVID-19 intensive care unit at Houston’s United Memorial Medical Center in 2020.

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