| Literature DB >> 32601577 |
Dua Azim1, Sundus Nasim1, Sohail Kumar2, Azhar Hussain3,4, Sundip Patel5.
Abstract
First identified in November 2019 in Hubei Province, the coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) caused by SARS-CoV-2 soon spread worldwide to become a global health pandemic. The COVID-19 preferentially damages the respiratory system that produces symptoms such as fever, cough, and shortness of breath. However, the infection often tends to disseminate to involve various organ systems. Recent evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2 can cause significant neurological damage and resultant neurological symptoms and complications. Here, we provide a comprehensive and thorough review of original articles, case reports, and case series to delineate the possible mechanisms of nervous system invasion and damage by SARS-CoV-2 and subsequent consequences. We divided the neurological manifestations into three categories: (1) Central Nervous System involvement, (2) Peripheral Nervous System manifestations, and (3) Skeletal Muscle Injury. Headache and dizziness were found to be the most prevalent symptoms followed by impaired consciousness. Among the symptoms indicating peripheral nervous system invasion, anosmia and dysgeusia were commonly reported. Skeletal muscle injury predominantly presents as myalgia. In addition, encephalitis, myelitis, cerebrovascular disease, Guillain-Barre syndrome, and Miller Fischer syndrome were among the commonly noted complications. We also emphasized the association of pre-existing comorbidities with neurological manifestations. The aim of this review is to provide a deeper understanding of the potential neurological implications to help neurologists have a high index of clinical suspicion allowing them to manage the patient appropriately.Entities:
Keywords: cerebrovascular injury; covid-19; hypoxic injury; immune-mediated injury; sars-cov-2
Year: 2020 PMID: 32601577 PMCID: PMC7317136 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.8790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Major modes of nervous system invasion and damage by SARS-CoV-2.
Figure 2Categorization of neurological manifestations and most reported symptoms.
Summary of reported cases of central nervous system (CNS) complications of COVID-19.
| Mao et al. [ | Helms et al. [ | Yin et al. [ | Giacomelli et al. [ | Bagheri et al. [ | Yan et al. [ | |
| Study design | Retrospective | Prospective | Retrospective | Cross-sectional | Cross-sectional | Cross-sectional |
| Number of patients | 214 | 58 | 106 | 59 | 10069 | 59 |
| Mean age (years) | 52.7 | 63 | 72 | 60 | 32.5 | 45 |
| Headache | 13.1% | - | 7.5% | 3.4% | - | 66.1% |
| Dizziness | 18.8% | - | 8.5% | - | - | |
| Impaired consciousness | 14.8% | - | 16% | - | - | |
| Hyposmia | 5.1% | - | - | 5.1% | 76.2% (sudden) 60.9% (progressive) | 68% |
| Hypogeusia | 5.6% | - | - | 10.2% | 71% | |
| Both hyposmia and hypogeusia | - | - | - | 18.6% | 83.3% | |
| Skeletal muscle injury/myalgia | 19.3% | - | 24.5% | - | - | 63% |
| Agitation | - | 69% | - | - | - | - |
| Confusion | - | 65% | - | - | - | - |
| Corticospinal tract sign | - | 67% | - | - | - | - |
Figure 3Central nervous system manifestations of COVID-19.
Summary of reported cases of central nervous system (CNS) complications of COVID-19.
| AUTHOR | LOCATION | AGE, GENDER | PRESENTATION AND DIAGNOSIS | RADIOLOGICAL FINDINGS |
| Xiang et al. [ | Beijing, China | - | PRESENTATION: frequent maxillofacial and angular twitching with persistent hiccups at 2 weeks after disease onset. DIAGNOSIS: SARS-CoV-2 associated encephalitis | - |
| Zhao et al. [ | Wuhan, China | 66 years, male | PRESENTATION: Flaccid paralysis of bilateral lower limbs and urinary and bowel incontinence. DIAGNOSIS: Post-infectious acute myelitis related to COVID-19 infection. | CHEST CT: Patchy high-density blurred shadow in the upper lobe of the left lung and patchy ground-glass shadow in the anterior segment of the upper lobe of the right lung. CRANIAL CT: Bilateral basal ganglia and paraventricular lacunar infarction, brain atrophy. |
| Filatov et al. [ | Boca Raton, USA | 74 years, male | PRESENTATION: Fever, cough, and altered mental status. DIAGNOSIS: COVID-19-associated encephalopathy | CHEST X-RAY: Bilateral ground-glass opacities with evidence of effusion. CHEST CT: Patchy bibasilar consolidations and subpleural opacities. |
| Moriguchi et al. [ | Yamanashi, Japan | 24 years, male | PRESENTATION: Convulsions with loss of consciousness. DIAGNOSIS: aseptic encephalitis with SARS-CoV-2 RNA in cerebrospinal fluid. | BRAIN MRI: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) showed hyperintensity along the wall of the inferior horn of the right lateral ventricle. FLAIR images showed hyperintense signal changes in the right mesial temporal lobe and hippocampus with slight hippocampal atrophy. These findings indicated right lateral ventriculitis and encephalitis mainly on the right mesial lobe and hippocampus. T2W image showed pan-paranasal sinusitis. |
| Sharifi et al. [ | Sari, Iran | 79 years, male | PRESENTATION: Acute loss of consciousness. DIAGNOSIS: Intracranial bleed associated with SARS-CoV-2. | CHEST CT: Ground-glass appearance. BRAIN CT: Intra-cerebral hemorrhage in the right cerebrum along with subarachnoid and intra-ventricular bleeding. |
| Poyiadji et al. [ | Michigan, USA | 50 years, female | PRESENTATION: Cough, fever, and altered mental status. DIAGNOSIS: Acute hemorrhagic necrotizing encephalopathy | HEAD CT WITHOUT CONTRAST: Symmetric hypo attenuation within the bilateral medial thalami. BRAIN MRI: Hemorrhagic rim enhancing lesions within the bilateral thalami, medial temporal lobes, and sub-insular regions. |
| Ye et al. [ | Wuhan, China | male | PRESENTATION: Altered level of consciousness which progressed to confusion. DIAGNOSIS: SARS-CoV-2 infection-related encephalitis. | CHEST CT: Multiple ground-glass opacities |
| Zanin et al. [ | Brescia, Italy | 54 years, female | PRESENTATION: Unconsciousness, seizures, anosmia, and ageusia. DIAGNOSIS: SARS-CoV-2 induced brain and spine demyelinating lesions. | CHEST CT: Revealed interstitial pneumonia. BRAIN MRI: T2WI images showed hyperintense lesions. Similar lesions were found in the cervical and dorsal spinal cord at bulbo-medullary junction. |
Figure 4Peripheral nervous system manifestations of COVID-19.
Summary of reported cases of peripheral nervous system (PNS) complications of COVID-19.
*Only abstract is available in English.
| AUTHOR | LOCATION | AGE, GENDER | PRESENTATION AND DIAGNOSIS | RADIOLOGICAL FINDINGS |
| Haldrup et al.* [ | Denmark | 30 years, - | Presentation: Mild flu and sudden anosmia and ageusia | - |
| Zhao et al. [ | Jingzhou, China | 66 years, Female | Presentation: Weakness in both legs, fatigue. Diagnosis: Guillain-Barre syndrome | - |
| Hjelmesæth and Skaare [ | Oslo, Norway | 1. In 60 years, female 2. In 60 years, male 3. In 90 years, male | Presentation: 1. Anosmia, ageusia. 2. Anosmia, ageusia. 3. Anosmia, dysgeusia, cough, dyspnea, and fever | - |
| Sedaghat and Karimi [ | Sari, Iran | 65 years, male | Presentation: Acute progressive symmetric ascending quadriparesis. Diagnoses: Guillain-Barre syndrome | Lung CT showed diffused consolidations and ground-glass opacities in both lungs and bilateral pleural effusion. |
| Gutiérrez-Ortiz et al. [ | Madrid, Spain | 1. 50 years, male 2. 39 years, male | Presentation: 1. Ageusia, right internuclear ophthalmoparesis, right fascicular oculomotor palsy, ataxia, areflexia. 2. Ageusia, bilateral abducens palsy, areflexia, and albuminocytologic dissociation. A few days before, he had developed diarrhea and a low-grade fever. Diagnosis: Miller Fisher syndrome and polyneuritis cranialis in COVID-19 patients. | Chest X-ray and head CT without contrast were normal for both patients. |
| Melley et al. [ | Pennsylvania, USA | 59 years, female | Presentation: Disturbed taste and a reduced sense of smell which progressed to anosmia | Chest X-ray and CT chest: multiple patchy ground-glass opacities in bilateral subpleural areas |
Figure 5Skeletal muscle injury complications associated with COVID-19.