Infection with COVID‐19 is no longer a public emergency: But what about degenerative dementia?

Author:

Yulug Burak1ORCID,Ayyıldız Behçet2,Ayyıldız Sevilay234,Sayman Dila1,Salar Ali Behram5,Cankaya Seyda1,Ozdemir Oktem Ece1,Ozsimsek Ahmet1,Kurt Cagla Ceren6,Lakadamyalı Hatice7,Akturk Aynur1,Altay Özlem8,Hanoglu Lutfu9,Velioglu Halil Aziz510,Mardinoglu Adil811

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and Neuroscience Alanya Alaaddin Keykubat University Antalya Turkey

2. Anatomy PhD Program, Graduate School of Health Sciences Kocaeli University Istanbul Turkey

3. Department of Neuroradiology, School of Medicine Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

4. TUM‐NIC Neuroimaging Center, School of Medicine Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

5. Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine Istanbul Medipol University Istanbul Türkiye

6. Department of Physiotherapy Alanya Alaaddin Keykubat University Antalya Turkey

7. Department of Radiology Alanya Alaaddin Keykubat University Antalya Turkey

8. KTH‐Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm Sweden

9. Department of Neurology Istanbul Medipol University Istanbul Turkey

10. Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience Feinstein Institute for Medical Research Manhasset New York USA

11. King's College London Faculty of Dentistry London UK

Abstract

AbstractAlthough no longer considered a public health threat, post‐COVID cognitive syndrome continues to impact on a considerable proportion of individuals who were infected with COVID‐19. Recent studies have also suggested that COVID may be represent a critical risk factor for the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We compared 17 COVID patients with 20 controls and evaluated the effects of COVID‐19 on general cognitive performance, hippocampal volume, and connections using structural and seed‐based connectivity analysis. We showed that COVID patients exhibited considerably worse cognitive functioning and increased hippocampal connectivity supported by the strong correlation between hippocampal connectivity and cognitive scores. Our findings of higher hippocampal connectivity with no observable hippocampal morphological changes even in mild COVID cases may be represent evidence of a prestructural compensatory mechanism for stimulating additional neuronal resources to combat cognitive dysfunction as recently shown for the prodromal stages of degenerative cognitive disorders. Our findings may be also important in light of recent data showing that other viral infections as well as COVID may constitute a critical risk factor for the development of AD. To our knowledge, this is the first study that investigated network differences in COVID patients, with a particular focus on compensatory hippocampal connectivity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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