医护人员轻度感染 SARS-CoV-2 后认知功能障碍的脑结构和功能标记。

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Brain communications Pub Date : 2024-09-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcae340
Javier J González-Rosa, María P Gómez-Molinero, Elena Lozano-Soto, Silvia P Fernández-Rosa, Marina Campos-Silvo, María Paula García-Rodríguez, Fátima Cano-Cano, Florencia Sanmartino, Raúl Rashid-López, Paloma Macías-García, Jaime D Gómez-Ramírez, Raúl Espinosa-Rosso, José Paz-Espósito, Rocío Gómez-Molinero, Lucía Forero, Álvaro J Cruz-Gómez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2感染通常会累及神经系统,导致认知功能障碍、疲劳和许多其他神经系统症状,这些症状正日益为人们所认识。尽管轻型冠状病毒病在全球占大多数病例,但对轻型冠状病毒病 2019(COVID-19)的病理生理学研究却很少受到关注。在这方面,最近的证据指出,约有30-40%的非危重、轻度至中度COVID-19幸存者在病后数月可能会出现认知障碍。因此,COVID-19 对大脑结构和功能的影响,以及轻度 COVID-19 感染后认知改变的潜在神经病理学机制,在很大程度上仍未得到探讨。这项回顾性多中心观察性队列研究完全基于医护人员样本(n = 65;55% 为女性,年龄在 21-61 岁之间),调查了在严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒 2 变体 Alpha 至 Delta 出现期间出现轻度 COVID-19 症状的非住院患者与大流行开始前接受测试的健康对照者的认知状况以及大脑结构和功能的完整性。所有评估均在感染后平均 9 个月的随访期间进行。参与者完成了全面的神经心理学评估以及结构和功能磁共振成像检查。放射学检查旨在检测轴向流体增强反转恢复图像上是否存在白质高密度。此外,还进行了全球和区域灰质完整性评估,分析灰质体积和皮质变薄的变化,以及静息状态大脑网络功能连接的改变。回归分析检验了特定认知障碍的存在与潜在的大脑结构和功能发现之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,除了轻度 COVID-19 患者存在与执行功能相关的特定障碍外,两组患者的临床、认知筛查和神经心理学检查结果均处于平均水平。与健康对照组相比,轻度COVID-19受试者表现出并皮层白质高密度增加、丘脑和枕叶体积减小、静息状态功能连接性减弱,涉及默认模式网络中的左侧楔前叶和楔叶,并影响到背侧注意网络中的右侧角回和左侧楔前叶。丘脑体积缩小是解释轻度 COVID-19 中观察到的执行功能障碍的最终模型中唯一选定的变量。随着时间的推移,大脑认知、结构和功能异常的存在表明,在感染 COVID-19 病毒后,神经系统也可能出现广泛的神经血管和炎症现象,而不是与病毒的直接或间接作用有关的永久性脑损伤。我们的研究结果强调,有必要关注轻度 COVID-19 原始感染对大脑造成的长期影响。
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Structural and functional brain markers of cognitive impairment in healthcare workers following mild SARS-CoV-2 infection during the original stream.

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection often involves the nervous system, leading to cognitive dysfunctions, fatigue and many other neurological signs that are becoming increasingly recognized. Despite mild forms of the disease accounting for most cases worldwide, research on the pathophysiology driving mild coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has received little attention. In this respect, recent evidence has pointed out that around 30-40% of non-critical, mild-to-moderate severity COVID-19 survivors may display cognitive disturbances several months post-illness. Hence, the impact of COVID-19 on the brain structure and function, through potential neuropathological mechanisms underpinning cognitive alterations in post-mild COVID-19 infections, remains largely unexplored. This retrospective multicentre observational cohort study, entirely based on a healthcare worker sample (n = 65; 55% females, aged 21-61), investigated the cognitive status and the structural and functional brain integrity among non-hospitalized individuals who developed mild COVID-19 symptoms during the occurrence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants Alpha to Delta, compared with healthy controls tested before the pandemic onset. All evaluations were performed at an average of 9-month follow-up post-infection period. Participants completed a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment and structural and functional MRI exams. Radiological inspection sought to detect the presence of white matter hyperintensities on axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images. Global and regional grey matter integrity assessment, analysing changes in grey matter volumes and cortical thinning, and functional connectivity alterations of resting-state brain networks were also conducted. Regression analyses tested the relationships between the presence of specific cognitive impairments and potential structural and functional brain findings. Our results revealed that clinical, cognitive screening and neuropsychological examinations were average between both groups, except for specific impairments related to executive functions in the mild COVID-19. Compared to healthy controls, mild COVID-19 subjects exhibited increased juxtacortical white matter hyperintensities, thalamic and occipital volume loss and diminished resting-state functional connectivity involving the left precuneus and cuneus in default-mode network and affecting the right angular gyrus and left precuneus in the dorsal attentional network. Reduced thalamic volume was the only variable selected in the final model explaining the observed executive function impairment in mild COVID-19. The presence of cognitive, structural and functional brain abnormalities over time suggests that the action of widespread neurovascular and inflammatory phenomena on the nervous system might also occur in mild forms following COVID-19 infection rather than permanent brain damage linked to the direct or indirect action of the virus. Our findings emphasize the need to pay attention to the long-term brain-related consequences of mild COVID-19 infections during the original stream.

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