A hypoarousal model of neurological post-COVID syndrome: the relation between mental fatigue, the level of central nervous activation and cognitive processing speed
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Published:2023-06-25
Issue:10
Volume:270
Page:4647-4660
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ISSN:0340-5354
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Container-title:Journal of Neurology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Neurol
Author:
Martin Eva MariaORCID, Rupprecht Sven, Schrenk Simon, Kattlun Fabian, Utech Isabelle, Radscheidt Monique, Brodoehl Stefan, Schwab Matthias, Reuken Philipp A., Stallmach Andreas, Habekost Thomas, Finke Kathrin
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Knowledge on the nature of post-COVID neurological sequelae often manifesting as cognitive dysfunction and fatigue is still unsatisfactory.
Objectives
We assumed that cognitive dysfunction and fatigue in post-COVID syndrome are critically linked via hypoarousal of the brain. Thus, we assessed whether tonic alertness as a neurocognitive index of arousal is reduced in these patients and how this relates to the level of central nervous activation and subjective mental fatigue as further indices of arousal.
Methods
40 post-COVID patients with subjective cognitive dysfunction and 40 matched healthy controls underwent a whole-report paradigm of briefly presented letter arrays. Based on report performance and computational modelling according to the theory of visual attention, the parameter visual processing speed (VPS) was quantified as a proxy of tonic alertness. Pupillary unrest was assessed as a measure of central nervous activation. The Fatigue Assessment Scale was applied to assess subjective mental fatigue using the corresponding subscale.
Results
VPS was reduced in post-COVID patients compared to controls (p = 0.005). In these patients, pupillary unrest (p = 0.029) and mental fatigue (p = 0.001) predicted VPS, explaining 34% of the variance and yielding a large effect with f2 = 0.51.
Conclusion
In post-COVID patients with subjective cognitive dysfunction, hypoarousal of the brain is reflected in decreased processing speed which is explained by a reduced level of central nervous activation and a higher level of mental fatigue. In turn, reduced processing speed objectifies mental fatigue as a core subjective clinical complaint in post-COVID patients.
Funder
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Horizon 2020 Framework Programme Thüringer Aufbaubank Universitätsklinikum Jena
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
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