Author: Graham, Edith L.; Clark, Jeffrey R.; Orban, Zachary S.; Lim, Patrick H.; Szymanski, April L.; Taylor, Carolyn; DiBiase, Rebecca M.; Jia, Dan Tong; Balabanov, Roumen; Ho, Sam U.; Batra, Ayush; Liotta, Eric M.; Koralnik, Igor J.
Title: Persistent neurologic symptoms and cognitive dysfunction in nonâ€hospitalized Covidâ€19 “long haulers†Cord-id: 82y56t7d Document date: 2021_3_30
ID: 82y56t7d
Snippet: OBJECTIVE: Most SARSâ€CoVâ€2â€infected individuals never require hospitalization. However, some develop prolonged symptoms. We sought to characterize the spectrum of neurologic manifestations in nonâ€hospitalized Covidâ€19 “long haulersâ€. METHODS: This is a prospective study of the first 100 consecutive patients (50 SARSâ€CoVâ€2 laboratoryâ€positive (SARSâ€CoVâ€2(+)) and 50 laboratoryâ€negative (SARSâ€CoVâ€2(â€)) individuals) presenting to our Neuroâ€Covidâ€19 clinic between
Document: OBJECTIVE: Most SARSâ€CoVâ€2â€infected individuals never require hospitalization. However, some develop prolonged symptoms. We sought to characterize the spectrum of neurologic manifestations in nonâ€hospitalized Covidâ€19 “long haulersâ€. METHODS: This is a prospective study of the first 100 consecutive patients (50 SARSâ€CoVâ€2 laboratoryâ€positive (SARSâ€CoVâ€2(+)) and 50 laboratoryâ€negative (SARSâ€CoVâ€2(â€)) individuals) presenting to our Neuroâ€Covidâ€19 clinic between May and November 2020. Due to early pandemic testing limitations, patients were included if they met Infectious Diseases Society of America symptoms of Covidâ€19, were never hospitalized for pneumonia or hypoxemia, and had neurologic symptoms lasting over 6 weeks. We recorded the frequency of neurologic symptoms and analyzed patientâ€reported quality of life measures and standardized cognitive assessments. RESULTS: Mean age was 43.2 ± 11.3 years, 70% were female, and 48% were evaluated in televisits. The most frequent comorbidities were depression/anxiety (42%) and autoimmune disease (16%). The main neurologic manifestations were: “brain fog†(81%), headache (68%), numbness/tingling (60%), dysgeusia (59%), anosmia (55%), and myalgias (55%), with only anosmia being more frequent in SARSâ€CoVâ€2(+) than SARSâ€CoVâ€2(â€) patients (37/50 [74%] vs. 18/50 [36%]; p < 0.001). Moreover, 85% also experienced fatigue. There was no correlation between time from disease onset and subjective impression of recovery. Both groups exhibited impaired quality of life in cognitive and fatigue domains. SARSâ€CoVâ€2(+) patients performed worse in attention and working memory cognitive tasks compared to a demographicâ€matched US population (Tâ€score 41.5 [37, 48.25] and 43 [37.5, 48.75], respectively; both p < 0.01). INTERPRETATION: Nonâ€hospitalized Covidâ€19 “long haulers†experience prominent and persistent “brain fog†and fatigue that affect their cognition and quality of life.
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