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Preliminary research finds that even mild cases of COVID-19 leave a mark on the brain

by Jessica Bernard, Texas A&M University

With more than 18 months of the pandemic in the rearview mirror, researchers have been steadily gathering new and important insights into the effects of COVID-19 on the body and brain. These findings are raising concerns about the long-term impacts that the coronavirus might have on biological processes such as aging.


As a cognitive neuroscientist, my past research has focused on understanding how normal brain changes related to aging affect people's ability to think and move – particularly in middle age and beyond. But as more evidence came in showing that COVID-19 could affect the body and brain for months or longer following infection, my research team became interested in exploring how it might also impact the natural process of aging.

Peering in at the brain's response to COVID-19
In August 2021, a preliminary but large-scale study investigating brain changes in people who had experienced COVID-19 drew a great deal of attention within the neuroscience community.

In that study, researchers relied on an existing database called the UK Biobank, which contains brain imaging data from over 45,000 people in the U.K. going back to 2014. This means – crucially – that there was baseline data and brain imaging of all of those people from before the pandemic.

The research team analyzed the brain imaging data and then brought back those who had been diagnosed with COVID-19 for additional brain scans. They compared people who had experienced COVID-19 to participants who had not, carefully matching the groups based on age, sex, baseline test date and study location, as well as common risk factors for disease, such as health variables and socioeconomic status.

The team found marked differences in gray matter – which is made up of the cell bodies of neurons that process information in the brain – between those who had been infected with COVID-19 and those who had not. Specifically, the thickness of the gray matter tissue in brain regions known as the frontal and temporal lobes was reduced in the COVID-19 group, differing from the typical patterns seen in the group that hadn't experienced COVID-19.


In the general population, it is normal to see some change in gray matter volume or thickness over time as people age, but the changes were larger than normal in those who had been infected with COVID-19.

Interestingly, when the researchers separated the individuals who had severe enough illness to require hospitalization, the results were the same as for those who had experienced milder COVID-19. That is, people who had been infected with COVID-19 showed a loss of brain volume even when the disease was not severe enough to require hospitalization.

Finally, researchers also investigated changes in performance on cognitive tasks and found that those who had contracted COVID-19 were slower in processing information, relative to those who had not.

While we have to be careful interpreting these findings as they await formal peer review, the large sample, pre- and post-illness data in the same people and careful matching with people who had not had COVID-19 have made this preliminary work particularly valuable.

What do these changes in brain volume mean?
Early on in the pandemic, one of the most common reports from those infected with COVID-19 was the loss of sense of taste and smell.

Strikingly, the brain regions that the U.K. researchers found to be impacted by COVID-19 are all linked to the olfactory bulb, a structure near the front of the brain that passes signals about smells from the nose to other brain regions. The olfactory bulb has connections to regions of the temporal lobe. We often talk about the temporal lobe in the context of aging and Alzheimer's disease because it is where the hippocampus is located. The hippocampus is likely to play a key role in aging, given its involvement in memory and cognitive processes.

The sense of smell is also important to Alzheimer's research, as some data has suggested that those at risk for the disease have a reduced sense of smell. While it is far too early to draw any conclusions about the long-term impacts of these COVID-related changes, investigating possible connections between COVID-19-related brain changes and memory is of great interest – particularly given the regions implicated and their importance in memory and Alzheimer's disease.

Looking ahead
These new findings bring about important yet unanswered questions: What do these brain changes following COVID-19 mean for the process and pace of aging? And, over time does the brain recover to some extent from viral infection?

These are active and open areas of research, some of which we are beginning to do in my own laboratory in conjunction with our ongoing work investigating brain aging.



Brain images from a 35-year-old and an 85-year-old. Orange arrows show the thinner gray matter in the older individual. Green arrows point to areas where there is more space filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) due to reduced brain volume. The purple circles highlight the brains' ventricles, which are filled with CSF. In older adults, these fluid-filled areas are much larger. Jessica Bernard, CC BY-ND

Our lab's work demonstrates that as people age, the brain thinks and processes information differently. In addition, we've observed changes over time in how peoples' bodies move and how people learn new motor skills. Several decades of work have demonstrated that older adults have a harder time processing and manipulating information – such as updating a mental grocery list – but they typically maintain their knowledge of facts and vocabulary. With respect to motor skills, we know that older adults still learn, but they do so more slowly then young adults.

When it comes to brain structure, we typically see a decrease in the size of the brain in adults over age 65. This decrease is not just localized to one area. Differences can be seen across many regions of the brain. There is also typically an increase in cerebrospinal fluid that fills space due to the loss of brain tissue. In addition, white matter, the insulation on axons – long cables that carry electrical impulses between nerve cells – is also less intact in older adults.

As life expectancy has increased in the past decades, more individuals are reaching older age. While the goal is for all to live long and healthy lives, even in the best-case scenario where one ages without disease or disability, older adulthood brings on changes in how we think and move.

Learning how all of these puzzle pieces fit together will help us unravel the mysteries of aging so that we can help improve quality of life and function for aging individuals. And now, in the context of COVID-19, it will help us understand the degree to which the brain may recover after illness as well.

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Jessica Bernard, Associate Professor, Texas A&M University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Why Sly, I'm impressed. Did you actually coauthor this study?
 
Perhaps society should treat the unvaccinated like lepers used to be treated-cast out of normal society and forced to live together and watch each other slowly waste away and die.

Choice is all well and good until it infringes on others and having crisis medical care declared in my state scares me who has been to ER for both Kidney Stones & chest pain that I may go and get turned away due to the number of unvaccinated people taking up space & resources.

Or maybe this should be done to the opposite group. If you have hitlerslike ideas like that, why not to try it on yourself first?
 
Or maybe this should be done to the opposite group. If you have hitlerslike ideas like that, why not to try it on yourself first?
Here's the difference, which should be as clear as the nose on your face, the vaccinated with masks on pose no threat to you but you are asking the vaccinated to risk their lives by being around you. And if everyone got vaccinated we wouldn't even need masks. No, you have no right to risk my life just to make you a tad more comfortable. It's kind of like cigarette smoke. People once believed they had a God given right to blow smoke in your face and possibly give you cancer. Those of us who didn't smoke got sick and tired of smokers taking advantage of us.
Those of us who are vaccinated have a God given right to breathe clean air free of smoke and free of Covid-19 disease. Go and infect yourselves and leave us alone.
 

What point are you trying to make with this graphic? None? That the vax works?

Vaccines and masks have suppressed the numbers. We all knew that the vaccines were not going to 100% COVID. Vaccines and masks suppress COVID spread. Ergo, if enough folks did one and/or the other, you suppress COVID and its' spread. Which might not have totally rid us of COVID, but we'll never know because of a bunch of selfish individuals. But if we all cared about our neighbors and our fellow mankind rather than just ourselves, we'd have all done more to play our part.
 
What point are you trying to make with this graphic? None? That the vax works?

Ultra-Vaxxed Israel’s Crisis Is a Dire Warning to America

JERUSALEM—The massive surge of COVID-19 infections in Israel, one of the most vaccinated countries on earth, is pointing to a complicated path ahead for America.

“I don’t want to frighten you,” coronavirus czar Dr. Salman Zarka told the Israeli parliament this week. “But this is the data. Unfortunately, the numbers don’t lie.”

“It is a combination of waning immunity, so that inoculated people get reinfected, and at the same time the very transmissible Delta variant.”
 
Israel is not ultra vaccinated. Only 62% of eligible people are fully vaccinated, that's less than California (71%). Add the fact that Israel has started with vaccines earlier - and what we are seeing there is exactly what is expected.

California has about 4 times the population of Israel but has a lower population density overall (although the big urban areas are similar in their density), yet California now averages 1/3 of the new daily cases as Israel.

In other words, vaccines work, and as can be expected, with time, vaccine need to be boosted.

Get vaccinated people.
 
Israel is not ultra vaccinated. Only 62% of eligible people are fully vaccinated, that's less than California (71%). Add the fact that Israel has started with vaccines earlier - and what we are seeing there is exactly what is expected.

California has about 4 times the population of Israel but has a lower population density overall (although the big urban areas are similar in their density), yet California now averages 1/3 of the new daily cases as Israel.

In other words, vaccines work, and as can be expected, with time, vaccine need to be boosted.

Get vaccinated people.

I like how this message has to be repeated over and over. Kinda like how the virus works. You have to get boosters just like you have to keep reminding folks about the information out there.

And even with breakthrough cases, people still aren't understanding how even if you are a breakthrough case, you are far less likely to end up in the hospital/ICU/ventilator.
 
When Mitch McConnell is a voice of reason..... Hell hath frozen over? Way to go, Turtle Man! He also mentions polio and its' eradication (which of course was the goal for COVID, but hey, people were willing to take the polio vax because microchips were not yet invented, OR were they?).

Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced during a floor speech on Monday that he has received a third dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, immediately following President Biden doing the same thing.

"I'm glad to share that a few minutes ago I received a booster vaccination for COVID-19," McConnell said as he began his speech. "All throughout the pandemic, I've followed the best advice from experts, and especially from my own healthcare providers."

"It was an easy decision to receive a booster," he continued. "I'm a survivor of childhood polio from before vaccines... eradicated that disease here in our country, and around the world now. So I've been a lifelong champion of vaccinations."

Before moving on to stating the GOP's position on keep the government open, McConnell reiterated his call for Americans to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

"All Americans should speak with their doctors and get vaccinated," he said.


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...it-was-an-easy-decision/ar-AAOSIh8?li=BBnbcA1
 
Ultra-Vaxxed Israel’s Crisis Is a Dire Warning to America

JERUSALEM—The massive surge of COVID-19 infections in Israel, one of the most vaccinated countries on earth, is pointing to a complicated path ahead for America.

“I don’t want to frighten you,” coronavirus czar Dr. Salman Zarka told the Israeli parliament this week. “But this is the data. Unfortunately, the numbers don’t lie.”

“It is a combination of waning immunity, so that inoculated people get reinfected, and at the same time the very transmissible Delta variant.”

And this is why, every time that I leave my house, I wear a mask and act as if everyone that I see is a carrier.
 
dowtukz0k1q71.jpg
 
Right. If the number of people going to hospitals were reduced by 75-80% we'd only have about 100k deaths. So like a bad flu year.

We wouldn't need to worry about masks.

Yes, we would. I take it you have not attended some of our S2 gatherings?

I have attended a few events and grateful to have so many ugly mugs covered up, (myself not included, though)!
 
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