Stanford study shows how COVID-19 affects the brain

In a recent study published in Nature, researchers found the brains of people who died from COVID-19 were remarkably similar to the brains of people who die from neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, showing inflammation and disrupted circuitry.

They found the brains of patients who died from severe COVID-19 showed profound molecular markers of inflammation, even though those patients didn’t have any reported clinical signs of neurological impairment.

The study is from Stanford University. One author is Tony Wyss-Coray.

In the study, the team analyzed brain tissue from eight people who died of COVID-19 and 14 people who died of other causes.

About one-third of hospitalized COVID-19 patients report neurological symptoms such as fuzzy thinking, forgetfulness, difficulty concentrating, and depression.

These problems can persist as part of what’s called “long COVID,” a lingering condition that sometimes affects patients after they recover from the original infection.

While there was strong inflammation in the brains of the deceased COVID-19 patients, their brain tissue didn’t have any signs of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

The team pointed out that scientists disagree about whether the virus is present in COVID-19 patients’ brains.

Viral infection appears to trigger inflammatory responses throughout the body that may cause inflammatory signaling across the blood-brain barrier, which in turn could trip off neuro-inflammation in the brain.

It’s likely that many COVID-19 patients, especially those reporting or exhibiting neurological problems or those who are hospitalized, have these neuro-inflammatory markers we saw in the people we looked at who had died from the disease.

These findings may help explain the brain fog, fatigue, and other neurological and psychiatric symptoms of long COVID.

If you care about covid and brain, please read studies about blood vessel damage and inflammation in COVID-19 patients’ brains and findings of effective ways to detect brain injury in people with COVID-19.

For more information about covid and your health, please see recent studies about the cause of ‘brain fog’ in people with COVID-19 and results showing that COVID patients have higher risk for this brain disease.

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