Summary: Following COVID-19 infection, all subtypes of dementia, irrespective of a persons previous dementia type, behave like rapidly progressive dementia.
Source: IOS Press
Infection with SARS-CoV-2 has a significant impact on cognitive function in patients with preexisting dementia, according to newresearch, published in theJournal of Alzheimers Disease Reports.
Patients with all subtypes of dementia included in the study experienced rapidly progressive dementia following infection with SARS-CoV-2.
Since the first wave of COVID-19, neurologists have noticed both acute and long-term neurological syndromes and neuropsychiatric sequelae of this infectious disease. Insights into the impact of COVID-19 on human cognition has so far remained unclear, with neurologists referring to brain fog.
A group of researchers driven to gain a better understanding of and dissipate this fog investigated the effects of COVID-19 on cognitive impairment in 14 patients with preexisting dementia (four with Alzheimers disease [AD], five with vascular dementia, three with Parkinsons disease dementia, and two with the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia), who had suffered further cognitive deterioration following COVID-19.
Lead investigators Souvik Dubey, MD, DM, from the Department of Neuromedicine, Bangur Institute of Neurosciences (BIN), Kolkata, West Bengal, India, and Julin Benito-Len, MD, PhD, from the Department of Neurology, University Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain, explained: We speculated there must have been some deleterious effect of COVID-19 in patients with preexisting dementia extrapolating our understanding from the cognitive impact of this viral infection in patients without dementia.
However, post-COVID-19 evaluation of cognitive impairments in patients with preexisting dementia is difficult due to multiple confounders and biases.
In addition to finding that that all subtypes of dementia, irrespective of patients previous dementia types, behaved like rapidly progressive dementia following COVID-19, the team of investigators found that the line of demarcation between different types of dementia became remarkably blurry post-COVID-19.
Co-investigator Ritwik Ghosh, MD, Department of General Medicine, Burdwan Medical College and Hospital, Burdwan, West Bengal, India, expressed his concern about dementia subtyping.
It is more difficult in the post-COVID-19 era, where the history of this viral infection plays the most important role. Few patients with a history of COVID-19 without preexisting dementia have phenotypically and imaging-wise similar brain changes mimicking other degenerative and vascular dementias.
Researchers also found that the characteristics of a particular type of dementia changed following COVID-19, and both degenerative and vascular dementias started behaving like mixed dementia both clinically and radiological.
A rapidly and aggressively deteriorating course was observed in patients having insidious onset, slowly progressive dementia, and who were previously cognitively stable.
Cortical atrophy was also evident in the studys subsequent follow-ups. Coagulopathy involving small vessels and inflammation, which were further correlated with white matter intensity changes in the brain, was considered the most important pathogenetic indicator.
The rapid progression of dementia, the addition of further impairments/deterioration of cognitive abilities, and the increase or new appearance of white matter lesions suggest that previously compromised brains have little defense to withstand a new insult (i.e., a second hit like infection/dysregulated immune response and inflammation).
According to Dr. Souvik Dubey and his co-investigators, Brain fog is an ambiguous terminology without specific attribution to the spectrum of post-COVID-19 cognitive sequelae.
Based on the progression of cognitive deficits and the association with white matter intensity changes, we propose a new term: FADE-IN MEMORY (i.e., Fatigue, decreased Fluency, Attention deficit, Depression, Executive dysfunction, slowed INformation processing speed, and subcortical MEMORY impairment).
Co-investigator Mahua Jana Dubey, MD, Department of Psychiatry, Berhampur Mental Hospital, Berhampur, West Bengal, India, added, Amidst various psychosocial impacts of COVID-19, cognitive deficits, when accompanied by depression and/or apathy and fatigue in patients with or without preexisting dementia, require meticulous evaluation because it imposes added stress and burden on caregivers, one of the most important but often forgotten issues that may have the potential to hamper treatment.
As the aging population and dementia are increasing globally, we believe pattern recognition of COVID-19-associated cognitive deficits is urgently needed to distinguish between COVID-19-associated cognitive impairments per se and other types of dementia. This understanding will have a definitive impact on future dementia research, Dr. Souvik Dubey concluded.
Increasing epidemiological evidence of the association of COVID-19 and AD is the heightened risk of AD with COVID-19, and of increased COVID-19 in patients with AD points to shared pathogenesis. Dubey et al further clarify this connection in demonstrating COVID-19 fundamentally alters the course of dementia no matter the cause, remarked George Perry, PhD, Editor-in-Chief,Journal of Alzheimers Disease, and Semmes Distinguished University Chair in Neurobiology at The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Author: Diana MurraySource: IOS Press Contact: Diana Murray IOS PressImage: The image is in the public domain
Original Research: Open access.The Effects of SARS-CoV-2 Infection on the Cognitive Functioning of Patients with Pre-Existing Dementia by Souvik Dubey et al. Journal of Alzheimers Disease Reports
Abstract
The Effects of SARS-CoV-2 Infection on the Cognitive Functioning of Patients with Pre-Existing Dementia
Cognitive postscripts of COVID-19, codenamed as cognitive COVID or brain fog, characterized by multidomain cognitive impairments, are now being reckoned as the most devastating sequelae of COVID-19. However, the impact on the already demented brain has not been studied.
We aimed to assess the cognitive functioning and neuroimaging following SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients with pre-existing dementia.
Fourteen COVID-19 survivors with pre-existing dementia (four with Alzheimers disease, five with vascular dementia, three with Parkinsons disease dementia, and two with the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia) were recruited. All these patients had detailed cognitive and neuroimaging evaluations within three months before suffering from COVID-19 and one year later.
Of the 14 patients, ten required hospitalization. All developed or increased white matter hyperintensities that mimicked multiple sclerosis and small vessel disease. There was a significant increase in fatigue (p=0.001) and depression (p=0.016) scores following COVID-19. The mean Frontal Assessment Battery (p<0.001) and Addenbrookes Cognitive Examination (p=0.001) scores also significantly worsened.
The rapid progression of dementia, the addition of further impairments/deterioration of cognitive abilities, and the increase or new appearance of white matter lesion burden suggest that previously compromised brains have little defense to withstand a new insult (i.e., second hit like infection/dysregulated immune response, and inflammation). Brain fog is an ambiguous terminology without specific attribution to the spectrum of post-COVID-19 cognitive sequelae. We propose a new codename, i.e. FADE-IN MEMORY (i.e., Fatigue, decreased Fluency, Attention deficit, Depression, Executive dysfunction, slowed INformation processing speed, and subcortical MEMORY impairment).
The rest is here:
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