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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

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Brain Problems Linked to Even Mild Virus Infections

Potentially fatal Covid-19 complications in the brain, including delirium, nerve damage and stroke may be more common than initially thought, a team of British-based doctors warned Wednesday.

Dolores Reyes Fernández, 61, hugs her father José Reyes Lozano, 87, for the first time in nearly four months as visits resume to a nursing home in Barcelona, Spain, Monday, June 22, 2020 following a virulent outbreak of the new coronavirus. The Ballesol Fabra i Puig elderly care center installed screens made of plastic film to resume relatives' visits to residents, halted in mid-March. Daughter and father toppled down the structure holding the screen as they eagerly reached out for each other in the presence of tearful nursing home workers. Nursing homes in Spain have been particularly hit by the novel virus, which has claimed at least 28,300 lives nationwide. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

PARIS (AFP) — Potentially fatal Covid-19 complications in the brain, including delirium, nerve damage and stroke may be more common than initially thought, a team of British-based doctors warned Wednesday.

Severe Covid-19 infections are known to put patients at risk of neurological complications, but research led by University College London suggests serious problems can occur even in people with mild cases of the virus.

The team looked at the neurological symptoms of 43 patients hospitalized with confirmed or suspected Covid-19.

They found 10 cases of temporary brain dysfunction, 12 cases of brain inflammation, eight strokes and eight cases of nerve damage.

Most of the patients with inflammation were diagnosed with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) — a rare condition typically seen in children after viral infections.

“We identified a higher than expected number of people with neurological conditions such as brain inflammation, which did not always correlate with the severity of respiratory symptoms,” said Michael Zandi, of UCL’s Queen Square Institute of Neurology and University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

The research, published in the journal Brain, showed that none of patients diagnosed with neurological problems had Covid-19 in their cerebrospinal fluid, suggesting that the virus did not directly attack their brains.

Perhaps crucially, the team found that ADEM diagnoses were “not related to the severity of the respiratory Covid-19 disease."

“Given that the disease has only been around for a matter of months, we might not yet know what long-term damage Covid-19 can cause,” said Ross Paterson from UCL’s Queen Square Institute of Neurology.

“Doctors need to be aware of possible neurological effects, as early diagnosis can improve patient outcomes.”

With more than 11 million confirmed infections worldwide, Covid-19 is known to cause a variety of health complications in addition to lung infection.

While the results of the study suggest that brain complications could be more common among virus patients than first thought, experts said it did not mean that brain damage cases were widespread.

“The scrutiny that the pandemic attracts means it would be very unlikely that there is a large parallel pandemic of unusual brain damage linked to Covid-19,” said Anthony David, director of UCL’s Institute of Mental Health.


by PATRICK GALEY © Agence France-Presse

Categories / Health, Science

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