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Cerebral hypoperfusion in post-COVID-19 cognitively impaired subjects revealed by arterial spin labeling MRI
Cerebral hypoperfusion in post-COVID-19 cognitively impaired subjects revealed by arterial spin labeling MRI
Study examining patients at a long COVID neurology clinic showing deficits in executive, attention, language and memory functions. MRIs showed reduced blood flow to frontal, parietal and temporal regions of the brain compared to age & sex matched controls
·nature.com·
Cerebral hypoperfusion in post-COVID-19 cognitively impaired subjects revealed by arterial spin labeling MRI
Tatiana Prowell, MD on Twitter
Tatiana Prowell, MD on Twitter
A study from #Brazil finds 1 in 4 adults who had mild #COVID19 demonstrated cognitive deficits. The average age of study participants was 38. See what happened when they were asked to copy a diagram. We are not prepared for this.
·twitter.com·
Tatiana Prowell, MD on Twitter
The effects of COVID-19 on cognitive performance in a community-based cohort: A COVID Symptom Study Biobank observational study
The effects of COVID-19 on cognitive performance in a community-based cohort: A COVID Symptom Study Biobank observational study
"Cognitive deficits following SARS-CoV-2 infection were detectable nearly two years post infection, and largest for individuals with longer symptom durations, ongoing symptoms, and/or more severe infection."
·medrxiv.org·
The effects of COVID-19 on cognitive performance in a community-based cohort: A COVID Symptom Study Biobank observational study
Symptomatic COVID-19 is associated with deficits in task-related cognitive function and psychiatric symptoms
Symptomatic COVID-19 is associated with deficits in task-related cognitive function and psychiatric symptoms
"The results indicated that symptomatic COVID-19 was associated with the lower performance of cognitive tasks involving decision-making and executive function, with low scores in delay discounting and Flanker test scores, respectively."
·news-medical.net·
Symptomatic COVID-19 is associated with deficits in task-related cognitive function and psychiatric symptoms
Long COVID Linked to Lower Brain Oxygen Levels, Cognitive Problems and Psychiatric Symptoms - Neuroscience News
Long COVID Linked to Lower Brain Oxygen Levels, Cognitive Problems and Psychiatric Symptoms - Neuroscience News
"Long COVID is linked to reduced oxygen uptake in the brain, a new study reports...finding is significant as a lack of sufficient oxygen supply may be one of the mechanisms that cause brain fog, cognitive problems...depression and anxiety"
·neurosciencenews.com·
Long COVID Linked to Lower Brain Oxygen Levels, Cognitive Problems and Psychiatric Symptoms - Neuroscience News
What we now know about long COVID and our brains
What we now know about long COVID and our brains
"Of more than 665 million cases worldwide, nearly 1 in every 2 people with COVID-19 is at risk of developing Post-COVID-19 Neurological Syndrome (PCNS).. PCNS mimic some of the symptoms after a stroke and younger adults seem to be at particular risk."
·pursuit.unimelb.edu.au·
What we now know about long COVID and our brains
Study explores COVID-19 effects on cognition
Study explores COVID-19 effects on cognition
"The study also found that the degree of cognitive impairment was not related to the amount of time that had elapsed between COVID-19 infection and the assessment, suggesting that they might be long-lasting."
·medicalxpress.com·
Study explores COVID-19 effects on cognition
Pnas
Pnas
SARS-CoV-2 is able to reach CNS of COVID-19 patients, infect astrocytes,and impair neuronal function/viability, contributing to the alterations of brain structure thereby resulting in neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric dysfunctions.
·pnas.org·
Pnas
Omicron better at invading young noses than other variants; smell loss may predict memory issues | Inquirer News
Omicron better at invading young noses than other variants; smell loss may predict memory issues | Inquirer News

Brain damage after even mild Covid in kids: Omicron is much better at invading children's noses, predicts memory issues. "Severity of smell dysfunction after infection may be a better predictor of long-term cognitive impairment than severity of COVID-19"

·newsinfo.inquirer.net·
Omicron better at invading young noses than other variants; smell loss may predict memory issues | Inquirer News
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志) on Twitter
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志) on Twitter

According to a systematic review on the COVID-19 survivors, "Seventy-nine percent of COVID-19 survivors at 1 months and 75% at 3- and 6-month follow-up showed cognitive impairment.."

3 in 4 is a quite high ratio.

·twitter.com·
Hiroshi Yasuda (保田浩志) on Twitter