Objective and subjective cognitive outcomes one year after COVID‐19

Author:

Zamarian Laura1ORCID,Rass Verena1,Goettfried Elisabeth1,Mayr Valentina1,Carbone Federico1,Kindl Philipp1,Delazer Margarete1ORCID,Djamshidian Atbin1ORCID,Fanciulli Alessandra1ORCID,Mahlknecht Philipp1,Heim Beatrice1ORCID,Peball Marina1,Schiefecker Alois Josef1,Seppi Klaus12,Löffler‐Ragg Judith34,Beer Ronny1,Pfausler Bettina1,Kiechl Stefan1,Helbok Raimund15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Medical University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

2. Department of Neurology Provincial Hospital of Kufstein Kufstein Austria

3. Department of Internal Medicine II Medical University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

4. Department of Pneumology State Hospital of Hochzirl–Natters Natters Austria

5. Department of Neurology Johannes Kepler University Linz Linz Austria

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis study aimed to evaluate subjective cognitive, physical, and mental health symptoms as well as objective cognitive deficits in COVID‐19 patients 1 year after infection.MethodsThis was a cross‐sectional study. Seventy‐four patients, who contracted a SARS‐CoV‐2 infection in 2020, underwent an in‐person neuropsychological assessment in 2021. This included standardized tests of memory, attention, and executive functions. In addition, participants also responded to scales on subjective attention deficits, mental health symptoms, and fatigue. Patients' scores were compared to published norms.ResultsPatients (N = 74) had a median age of 56 years (42% female). According to the initial disease severity, they were classified as mild (outpatients, 32%), moderate (hospitalized, non‐ICU‐admitted, 45%), or severe (ICU‐admitted, 23%). Hospitalized patients were more often affected than outpatients. In general, deficits were most common in attention (23%), followed by memory (15%) and executive functions (3%). Patients reported increased levels of fatigue (51%), anxiety (30%), distractibility in everyday situations (20%), and depression (15%). An additional analysis suggested an association between lower scores in an attention task and hyperferritinemia. As indicated by a hierarchical regression analysis, subjective distractibility was significantly predicted by current anxiety and fatigue symptoms but not by objective attention performance (final model, adj‐R2 = 0.588, P < 0.001).InterpretationOne year after infection, COVID‐19 patients can have frequent attention deficits and can complain about symptoms such as fatigue, anxiety, and distractibility. Anxiety and fatigue, more than objective cognitive deficits, have an impact on the patients' experienced impairments in everyday life.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

Wiley

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