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Ongoing brain injury caused by COVID-19 can be missed by routine tests

Markers of brain injury are present in the blood many months after COVID-19 infection, despite inflammation blood tests being normal, a new study has revealed.

The reseach COVID-19 Clinical Neuroscience Study (COVID-CNS) was led by the University of Liverpool and King’s College London, with support from scientists from the ISARIC4C consortium, The Pandemic Institute and the NIHR BioResource.

Professor Benedict Michael is Principal Investigator and Director of the University of Liverpool’s Infection Neuroscience Laboratory and Honorary Consultant Neurologist, The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust.

The researcher said: “During the COVID-19 pandemic it became apparent that neurological complications were occurring in a significant proportion of hospitalised patients and even in those with mild COVID-19 infection.

“While some neurological ‘symptoms’ were often mild (headache and muscle aches [myalgia]), it became clear that more significant and potentially life-changing new neurological ‘complications’ were occurring, including encephalitis (brain inflammation), seizures and stroke.”

Researchers study analysed samples from over 800 patients hospitalised with COVID-19 from across England and Wales, half of whom with new neurological conditions.

The team measured brain injury markers, serum inflammatory proteins (cytokines), antibodies, and brain (neuroglial) injury proteins.

The analysis showed that during the acute phase there is production of key inflammatory proteins and brain injury markers, but surprisingly on-going robust biomarker evidence of brain (neuroglial) injury in COVID-19 even months after discharge from hospital.

Crucially, this was more prominent in patients with neurological dysfunction in the acute phase of the illness, and continued in the recovery phase in those who had suffered acute neurological complications.

The inflammatory markers are associated with abnormal immune responses in the acute phase of the disease, with the researchers suggesting that these may represent targets for therapy for COVID-19 and other infections which cause acute brain dysfunction.

Professor Michael said: “Our study shows that markers of brain injury are present in the blood months after COVID-19, and particularly in those who have had a COVID-19-induced brain complication (e.g. inflammation, or stroke), despite resolution of the inflammatory response in the blood.

“This suggests the possibility of ongoing inflammation and injury inside the brain itself which may not be detected by blood tests for inflammation.”

Head of the Department of Clinical Infection, Microbiology & Immunology, Professor Aras Kadioglu, said: “The Liverpool team led by Professor Benedict Michael and colleagues is now working to understand what this means for cognitive function, independence and recovery in those affected.”

Professor Leonie Taams, from King’s College London, added: “It was a great privilege to be part of this important cross-disciplinary research by the COVID-CNS consortium.

“By bringing together immunology, neurology and infection research, we were able to reveal a number of biomarkers that were associated with the neurological complications of COVID-19.

“This work may help set the stage for elucidating the possible underlying mechanisms of these complications.”

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