Neurological manifestations of COVID-19 and other coronaviruses: A systematic review

Alyne Oliveira Correia , Pedro Walisson Gomes Feitosa , Jorge Lucas de Sousa Moreira , Samuel Átila Rodrigues Nogueira , Ricardo Brandão Fonseca , Maria Elizabeth Pereira Nobre
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引用次数: 112

Abstract

Objective

To describe the main neurological manifestations related to coronavirus infection in humans.

Methodology

A systematic review was conducted regarding clinical studies on cases that had neurological manifestations associated with COVID-19 and other coronaviruses. The search was carried out in the electronic databases PubMed, Scopus, Embase, and LILACS with the following keywords: “coronavirus” or “Sars-CoV-2” or “COVID-19” and “neurologic manifestations” or “neurological symptoms” or “meningitis” or “encephalitis” or “encephalopathy,” following the Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines.

Results

Seven studies were included. Neurological alterations after CoV infection may vary from 17.3% to 36.4% and, in the pediatric age range, encephalitis may be as frequent as respiratory disorders, affecting 11 % and 12 % of patients, respectively. The Investigation included 409 patients diagnosed with CoV infection who presented neurological symptoms, with median age range varying from 3 to 62 years. The main neurological alterations were headache (69; 16.8 %), dizziness (57, 13.9 %), altered consciousness (46; 11.2 %), vomiting (26; 6.3 %), epileptic crises (7; 1.7 %), neuralgia (5; 1.2 %), and ataxia (3; 0.7 %). The main presumed diagnoses were acute viral meningitis/encephalitis in 25 (6.1 %) patients, hypoxic encephalopathy in 23 (5.6 %) patients, acute cerebrovascular disease in 6 (1.4 %) patients, 1 (0.2 %) patient with possible acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, 1 (0.2 %) patient with acute necrotizing hemorrhagic encephalopathy, and 2 (1.4 %) patients with CoV related to Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Conclusion

Coronaviruses have important neurotropic potential and they cause neurological alterations that range from mild to severe. The main neurological manifestations found were headache, dizziness and altered consciousness.

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COVID-19和其他冠状病毒的神经学表现:系统综述
目的探讨人冠状病毒感染的主要神经学表现。方法系统回顾与新冠病毒及其他冠状病毒相关的神经学表现病例的临床研究。检索在PubMed、Scopus、Embase和LILACS电子数据库中进行,检索关键词为:“冠状病毒”或“Sars-CoV-2”或“COVID-19”和“神经系统表现”或“神经系统症状”或“脑膜炎”或“脑炎”或“脑病”,检索遵循系统评价和荟萃分析(PRISMA)指南。结果共纳入7项研究。冠状病毒感染后的神经系统改变可能从17.3%到36.4%不等,在儿科年龄段,脑炎可能与呼吸系统疾病一样常见,分别影响11%和12%的患者。该调查包括409例诊断为冠状病毒感染并出现神经系统症状的患者,中位年龄范围从3岁到62岁不等。主要的神经系统改变是头痛(69;16.8%),头晕(57例,13.9%),意识改变(46例;11.2%),呕吐(26%);6.3%),癫痫危象(7;1.7%),神经痛(5%;1.2%),共济失调(3;0.7%)。主要推定诊断为急性病毒性脑膜炎/脑炎25例(6.1%),缺氧脑病23例(5.6%),急性脑血管病6例(1.4%),可能合并急性播散性脑脊髓炎1例(0.2%),急性坏死性出血性脑病1例(0.2%),格林-巴-罗综合征相关冠状病毒2例(1.4%)。结论冠状病毒具有重要的嗜神经潜能,可引起从轻度到重度的神经系统改变。主要的神经学表现为头痛、头晕和意识改变。
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期刊介绍: Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research publishes original papers and reviews in biological psychiatry, brain research, neurology, neuropsychiatry, neuropsychoimmunology, psychopathology, psychotherapy. The journal has a focus on international and interdisciplinary basic research with clinical relevance. Translational research is particularly appreciated. Authors are allowed to submit their manuscript in their native language as supplemental data to the English version. Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research is related to the oldest German speaking journal in this field, the Centralblatt fur Nervenheilkunde, Psychiatrie und gerichtliche Psychopathologie, founded in 1878. The tradition and idea of previous famous editors (Alois Alzheimer and Kurt Schneider among others) was continued in modernized form with Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research. Centralblatt was a journal of broad scope and relevance, now Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research represents a journal with translational and interdisciplinary perspective, focusing on clinically oriented research in psychiatry, neurology and neighboring fields of neurosciences and psychology/psychotherapy with a preference for biologically oriented research including basic research. Preference is given for papers from newly emerging fields, like clinical psychoimmunology/neuroimmunology, and ideas.
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