Impact of COVID‐19 infection on cognition and its association with neurological symptoms

Author:

Almeria Marta12ORCID,Cejudo Juan Carlos3,Sanz‐Santos Jose4,Deus Joan56,Krupinski Jerzy17

Affiliation:

1. Medicine Department Autonomous University of Barcelona Barcelona Spain

2. Department of Neurology Hospital Universitari MútuaTerrassa Terrassa Barcelona Spain

3. Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Unit, Hospital Sagrat Cor Hermanas Hospitalarias, Martorell Barcelona Spain

4. Department of Pneumology Hospital Universitari MútuaTerrassa Terrassa Barcelona Spain

5. Clinical and Health Department, Psychology Faculty Autonomous University of Barcelona Barcelona Spain

6. MRI Research Unit, Hospital del Mar Barcelona Spain

7. Healthcare sciences Manchester Metropolitan University, CBS Manchester UK

Abstract

AbstractObjective: To characterize the cognitive profile following COVID‐19 infection and its possible association to clinical symptoms, emotional disturbance, biomarkers, and disease severity.Methods: This was a single‐center cross‐sectional cohort study. Subjects between 20‐ and 60‐year old with confirmed COVID‐19 infection were included. Evaluation was performed between April 2020 and July 2021. Patients with previous cognitive impairment and other neurological or severe psychiatric disorders were excluded. Demographic and laboratory data were extracted from the medical records.Results: Altogether 200 patients were included, 85 subjects were female (42.3%), and mean age was 49.12 years (SD: 7.84). Patients were classified into four groups: nonhospitalized (NH, n = 21), hospitalized without intensive care unit (ICU) nor oxygen therapy (HOSP, n = 42), hospitalized without ICU but with oxygen therapy (OXY, n = 107), and ICU (ICU, n = 31) patients. NH group was younger (p = .026). No significant differences were found in any test performed attending severity of illness (p > .05). A total of 55 patients reported subjective cognitive complaints (SCC). Subjects with neurological symptoms (NS) performed worse in trail making test B (p = .013), digits backwards (p = .006), letter&numbers (p = .002), symbol digit modalities test (p = .016), and Stroop color (p = .010) tests.Conclusions: OXY patients and females referred more SCC associated with symptoms of anxiety and depression. Objective cognitive performance was unrelated to SCC. No cognitive impairment was found regarding the severity of COVID‐19 infection. Results suggest that NS such as headache, anosmia, and dysgeusia during infection were a risk factor for later cognitive deficits. Tests assessing attention, processing speed, and executive function were the most sensitive in detecting cognitive changes in these patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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