San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Evidence of post-COVID ‘brain fog’

- By Nanette Asimov

“It’s possible that the immune system, stimulated by the virus, may be functionin­g in an unintended pathologic­al way.”

Scientists studying the persistent “brain fog” that plagues many people after a bout with COVID-19 are reporting, for the first time, abnormalit­ies in the clear liquid surroundin­g the brain and spinal cord of several patients.

The discovery of elevated protein levels in the cerebrospi­nal fluid suggests the presence of inflammati­on, while unexpected antibodies may reveal an abnormally activated immune system, according to small study led by UCSF and published Tuesday in the journal Annals of Clinical and Translatio­nal Neurology.

“It’s possible that the immune system, stimulated by the virus, may be functionin­g in an

Dr. Joanna Hellmuth, UCSF’s Coronaviru­s Neurocogni­tive Study unintended pathologic­al way” even though the virus was no longer present, said Dr. Joanna Hellmuth, a brain expert at UCSF’s Coronaviru­s Neurocogni­tive Study and the study’s senior author.

Overall, the abnormalit­ies also provide evidence to support what such patients have been insisting since the pandemic began: that their debilitati­ng, post-COVID cognitive problems are real — not a matter of being tired or stressed, say the study’s authors.

“A lot of people have been told by doctors, friends or family that they’re crazy,” Hellmuth said. “We need to not dismiss people if we don’t know what’s going on.”

Brain fog is among the most common complaints of people suffering from long COVID, the mysterious array of unrelentin­g symptoms experience­d by a subset of people infected by the coronaviru­s.

The cognitive complaints usually focus on “executive

Cliff Morrison of Oakland, who had COVID-19 in spring 2020, is enrolled in several UCSF studies on long-term COVID.

Lilli Rey (left) and Pati Ramirez greet Maria Vega and 9-month-old Estrella at Ayudando Latinos A Soñar.

functions” — rememberin­g recent events, recalling names and other details, concentrat­ion, speed of thought — all of which are supported by the brain’s frontal networks, said Hellmuth, noting that people can also experience such difficulti­es for reasons other than COVID.

Study participan­ts with brain fog had an average of 2.5 cognitive risk factors — such as diabetes, high blood pressure or a history of alcohol use — while those without brain fog had less than one risk factor, on average.

The researcher­s — including those at New York’s Weill Cornell Medicine, as well as UCSF’s Alexandra Apple, Steven Deeks and Samuel Pleasure, among others — studied 17 participan­ts who had had COVID an average of 10 months earlier but had never been hospitaliz­ed for it. All but four had persistent cognitive symptoms since becoming infected.

After performing a lumbar puncture in each volunteer, the researcher­s analyzed the cerebrospi­nal fluid that helps regulate blood flow to the brain, among other functions.

The four with no cognitive symptoms had normal cerebrospi­nal fluid.

But 10 of the remaining 13 participan­ts showed elevated protein levels in the vital liquid, suggesting heightened inflammati­on and, in some cases, had antibodies indicating a potentiall­y overactive immune system.

The findings are just one step in a long road toward understand­ing post-COVID brain fog, Hellmuth said, noting that the anomalies “may not be causing the cognitive changes” but are clearly associated with the condition.

Dr. Avindra Nath, clinical director of the National Institute

Above: Cliff Morrison, who has long-COVID symptoms, settles in for a nap in his office at Telecare Redwood Place in Castro Valley in October. Below: Morrison speaks with recovery specialist Dorica Nyambegah while at Telecare Redwood Place.

of Neurologic­al Disorders and Stroke, who was not involved in the study, said drawbacks include its small sample size and several unknowns, including whether the abnormalit­ies will persist in all the patients or disappear in some, and what effect the underlying conditions had on the patients with brain fog.

“It is well known that any systemic infection can worsen an underlying condition and unmask it,” he said.

But Nath said the study’s strengths are that the researcher­s were able to document “the possibilit­y that some of the (cognitive) manifestat­ions may be immune mediated” — influenced by an immune response gone awry — among a group of non-hospitaliz­ed patients with mild COVID symptoms.

Dr. Jennifer Frontera, a neurologis­t specializi­ng in brain injury at NYU Langone Health

in New York, who is also unaffiliat­ed with the study, called it interestin­g despite its small size and its reliance on self-reported symptoms.

“At the end of the day, I like what they’re doing. They’re looking at people in a very systematic fashion,” Frontera said. “As they continue this work and have a larger number of participan­ts, I think they’ll be able to generate data that offers even more insight into the possible underlying mechanisms of post-COVID cognitive dysfunctio­n.”

Cliff Morrison of Oakland has had persistent brain fog since being diagnosed with COVID in April 2020. A patient of Hellmuth’s enrolled in several UCSF studies of long COVID, Morrison doesn’t know if the researcher­s included his cerebrospi­nal fluid in their research. But he said he’s glad the scientists are on the case.

“It makes me more optimistic,” said Morrison, 70, whose forgetfuln­ess led him to retire last week from his job as a health care administra­tor in Castro Valley after nearly two decades on the job. “It seems like the research is going slow, but we’ve been doing this for less than two years. This study has given me hope.”

COVID isn’t the only virus associated with post-infection cognitive problems. Others include HIV, coronaviru­ses such as SARS and MERS, hepatitis C and Epstein-Barr.

 ?? Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle 2021 ??
Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle 2021
 ?? Photos by Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle 2021 ??
Photos by Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle 2021
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