| Literature DB >> 34149394 |
Riccardo Manca1, Matteo De Marco1, Paul G Ince1, Annalena Venneri1,2.
Abstract
Background: Other than its direct impact on cardiopulmonary health, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection affects additional body systems, especially in older adults. Several studies have reported acute neurological symptoms that present at onset or develop during hospitalisation, with associated neural injuries. Whilst the acute neurological phase is widely documented, the long-term consequences of COVID-19 infection on neurocognitive functioning remain unknown. Although an evidence-based framework describing the disease chronic phase is premature, it is important to lay the foundations for future data-driven models. This systematic review aimed at summarising the literature on neuroimaging and neuropathological findings in older over-60 patients with COVID-19 following a cognitive neuroscientific perspective, to clarify the most vulnerable brain areas and speculate on the possible cognitive consequences.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; ageing; encephalitis; encephalopathy; neuroimaging; neuropathology; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149394 PMCID: PMC8209297 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.646908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Flow chart outlining the study selection process according to the PRISMA framework.
Summary of the characteristics and findings of the studies included in the review.
| Anand et al. ( | Case series | 5 | 61, 75, 81, 88, 88 | 4/1 | Encephalopathy - seizures | TBI, remote left MCA infarct, PD, history of cardiac arrest, end-stage renal disease, intellectual disability | CT | USA | CT abnormalities in left frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes (and in left MCA territory, due to a prior infarct); right frontal and bilateral cerebellar leukoencephalopathy and gyral diffusion alterations; no abnormalities in two cases. |
| Delorme et al. ( | Case series | 4 | 60, 66, 69, 72 | 2/2 | Encephalopathy | None reported | MRI and FDG-PET | France | Hypometabolism in bilateral frontal cortices in all cases (prefrontal in three and orbitofrontal in one case) and in posterior associative cortices in two cases (only left parieto-temporal in one case); hypermetabolism in the cerebellar vermis in all, bilateral striatum in two cases. In one case, right orbitofrontal hyperintensities, |
| Fernández-Domínguez et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 74 | 1/0 | Encephalopathy—Miller-Fisher-like syndrome | Hypertension and follicular lymphoma treated from 2014 to 2015 | MRI | Spain | No abnormalities. |
| Guedj et al. ( | Single case (#2 from a case series) | 1 | 62 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy | No significant prior conditions | FDG-PET (whole body) | France | Hypometabolism in: bilateral medial temporal lobe, cerebellum, hypothalamus, left thalamus, right gyrus rectus, medulla oblongata, pons, left cingulate gyrus and right precentral, postcentral and superior temporal gyri. |
| Jang et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 67 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy | Anorexia and depression | CT and MRI | USA | No abnormalities on CT; mild scattered deep periventricular and subcortical WM ischaemic lesions on MRI, but no evidence of encephalitis, posterior reversible encephalopathy, or leukoencephalopathy. |
| Logmin et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 70 | 1/0 | Encephalopathy - recurrent non-epileptic seizures/convulsive syncope | Syncope, neuropathic pain, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation | MRI | Germany | No abnormalities, apart from three hyperintensities due to minimal prior ischaemic events. |
| Manganelli et al. ( | Case series | 2 | 66, 67 | 1/1 | Encephalopathy | None reported | CT and MRI | Italy | No MRI abnormalities in male patient; scattered gliosis in right pons on CT in one case. |
| Palomar-Ciria et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 65 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy | Schizophrenia | CT and MRI | Spain | Deep WM leukoencephalopathy due to small vessel pathology on CT (unclear relation to COVID-19); dilatation of ventricles and subarachnoid spaces in line with the patient's age on MRI. |
| Vollono et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 78 | 1/0 | Encephalopathy—non-convulsive status epilepticus | Hypertension, epilepsy due to prior Herpes Simplex Virus-1 encephalitis | CT and MRI | Italy | No abnormalities on CT; old gliosis and atrophy involving the left temporal/parietal lobes on MRI, but no recent acute lesions. |
| Young et al. ( | Single case | 1 | ≥ 60 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy—Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease | None reported | MRI and FDG-PET | USA | Hyperintensities and hypometabolism diffuse throughout the left hemisphere cortex, the left caudate nucleus and thalamus and the right cerebellum. |
| Muccioli et al. ( | Case series | 4 (out of 5) | 75, 69, 69, 67 | 1/3 | Encephalopathy | Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, previous stroke, MCI, bipolar disorder, iatrogenic parkinsonism, hypertensive cardiopathy | MRI | Italy | Encephalopathy developed after sedation in two patients who showed chronic cerebral small vessel disease; cerebral atrophy and non-specific diffuse parietal WM hyperintensity in one case; old right fronto-parietal stroke in one case. |
| Parauda et al. ( | Case series | 4 | 64, 73, 65, 74 | 2/2 | Encephalopathy | Hypertension, diabetes, hypothyroidism, hyperlipidaemia | CT and MRI | USA | #1: CT at admission was unremarkable, but new bilateral occipital confluent WM hypodensities and lucencies in fronto-parietal WM and in left posterior limb of the internal capsule after 6 days; MRI-confirmed hyperintensities in same locations after 32 days. #2, #3, #4: hypoattenuation in bilateral parietal-occipital WM on CT and hyperintensities in same areas on MRI. |
| Pugin et al. ( | Case series | 5 | 75 (69-78) | 2/3 | Encephalopathy | Hypertension, diabetes, smoking, immunodepression, COPD, chronic kidney disease, cerebrovascular disease | MRI | Switzerland | All patients under mechanical ventilation. Abnormal contrast enhancement, consistent with inflammation of endothelial cells, in vascular walls of: vertebral artery (all cases), internal carotid (three cases), basilar artery (two cases) and both PCAs (one case); bilateral small watershed ischaemia in one case; no other brain abnormalities or enhancements in leptomeningeal spaces. |
| Chaumont et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 69 | 0/1 | Encephalitis—meningoencephalitis | None reported | MRI | France - Guadeloupe | No abnormalities. |
| Hosseini et al. ( | Single case (#2 from a case series) | 1 | 79 | 1/0 | Encephalitis—limbic encephalitis | None reported | CT and MRI | UK | Chronic small vessel ischaemic damage on first MRI; diffusion alterations in mediotemporal and limbic areas on subsequent CT and MRI. |
| Khoo et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 65 | 1/0 | Encephalitis—brainstem encephalitis | Osteoarthritis and gastro-oesophageal reflex disease, suspected AD | MRI | UK | No abnormalities. |
| Le Guennec et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 69 | 0/1 | Encephalitis—orbitofrontal encephalitis | Diabetes, hypertension, one previous seizure | CT and MRI | France | No abnormalities on CT; hyperintensity in the right orbitofrontal cortex, mesial prefrontal cortex and caudate nucleus. The hyperintensity persisted in the right caudate after 15 days, but completely resolved after 30 days. |
| Novi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 64 | 1/0 | Encephalitis—ADEM | Vitiligo, hypertension, and monoclonal gammopathy | MRI | Italy | ADEM characterised by gadolinium-enhancing lesions in spinal cord, optic tract and in temporal/ occipital and frontal areas. |
| McCuddy et al. ( | Single case (#3 from a case series) | 1 | 70 | 1/0 | Encephalitis—ADEM | Obesity, peripheral neuropathy, glaucoma, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, hyperlipidaemia | MRI | USA | Hyperintense lesions, mostly with restricted diffusion, in deep WM, corpus callosum and left brachium pontis. Slight improvement after 8 days. |
| Pilotto et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 60 | 0/1 | Encephalitis | None reported | CT and MRI | Italy | No abnormalities. |
| Avula et al. ( | Case series | 4 | 73, 83, 80, 88 | 3/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, dyslipidaemia, carotid stenosis, frequent urinary tract infections, type 2 diabetes and neuropathy | CT and MRI | USA | #1: Left parieto-occipital territory; #2: Right posterior frontal lobe; #3: Right middle-cerebral-artery stroke with hypoperfusion extending to almost the entire hemisphere; #4: Left mediotemporal lobe. |
| Basi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 66 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | COPD, atrial fibrillation and previous ischaemic stroke | CT | UK | Right inferior medial prefrontal lobe with suspected infarction in the right cerebellum. |
| Katz et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 (with neuroimaging details out of 86 cases) | 62 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | None reported | CT | USA | Bilateral middle cerebral artery infarction with anterior frontal involvement. |
| Morassi et al. ( | Case series | 4 from a series of 6 cases | 64, 75, 82, 76 | 1/3 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | History of smoking, history of myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, previous TIA, previous stroke, aortic valve replacement | CT | Italy | #1: Various cortical and subcortical regions of both hemispheres (including left occipital and right precentral territory); #2: Right cingulate gyrus, right fronto-parietal, left pericentral, bilateral occipital and vermian/left cerebellar areas; #3: Right thalamus and right temporal centrum semiovale; #4: Right caudate, left prerolandic and superior frontal areas. |
| Zayet et al. ( | Case series | 2 | 84, 74 | 0/2 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, coronary heart disease, peripheral arterial disease and atrial fibrillation, multiple cardiovascular diseases (including atrial fibrillation) | MRI | France | #1: Multiple regions including bilateral cerebellum, right occipital cortex, bilateral parieto-occipital cortical territory and fronto-parietal subcortical regions; #2: Large left frontal ischaemia and additional ischaemic areas in the cerebellum and in the parieto-occipital cortex, bilaterally. |
| Barrios-López et al. ( | Case series | 3 from a series of 4 cases (#2, #3, #4) | 64, 85, 87 | 2/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, type 2 diabetes, hypertensive heart disease, asthma, atrial fibrillation and ischaemic heart disease | CT | Spain | #2: Left cerebellar and occipito-temporal regions; #3: Right fronto-temporal regions; #4: Right middle cerebral artery territory. |
| Mohamud et al. ( | Case series | 4 from a series of 6 cases (#2, #3, #4, #6) | 78, 62, 74, 67 | 1/3 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease and hyperlipidaemia | CT | USA | #2: Left caudate, putamen, and left fronto-parietal and paracentral cortices; #3: Right frontal and temporal lobes; #4 and #6: No abnormalities. |
| Papi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 79 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, type 2 diabetes and atrial fibrillation | CT | Italy | Left frontal, parietal, insular and temporal areas of penumbra. |
| Bolaji et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 63 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Diabetes and asthma | CT | UK | Right parietal cortex. |
| Goldberg et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 64 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, aplastic anaemia and splenectomy | CT | USA | Bilateral fronto-parietal regions. |
| Tunç et al. ( | Case series | 3 from a series of 4 cases (#2, #3, #4) | 67, 72, 77 | 1/2 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension | MRI | Turkey | #2: In proximity to the caudate body; #3: Left fronto-parietal regions; #4: Right pons. |
| Viguier et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 73 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | None reported | CT and MRI | France | Left fronto-parietal regions. |
| Zhang et al. ( | Case series | 3 | 69, 65, 70 | 1/2 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, diabetes and stroke, coronary artery disease, emphysema and nasopharyngeal carcinoma | CT | China | #1: Frontal, parietal and occipital lobe, basal ganglia, brainstem and cerebellum (bilaterally); #2: Right frontal and bilateral parietal lobe; #3: Bilateral frontal, right parietal, temporal and occipital lobe, and bilateral cerebellar hemispheres. |
| Diaz-Segarra et al. ( | Case series | 2 from a series of 4 cases (#3 and #4) | 65, 68 | 1/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension and type 2 diabetes | MRI | USA | #3: Scattered punctuated foci in both cerebral hemispheres; #4: Right medial occipital lobe. |
| Janjua and Moscote-Salazar ( | Single case | 1 | 65 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Diabetes and mild dementia | CT | Colombia | Bilateral basal ganglia, occipital lobes and cerebellar hemispheres. |
| Co et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 62 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, prediabetes, dyslipidaemia and history of TIA | CT | Philippines | Left centrum semiovale and corona radiata. |
| Zhai et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 79 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Atrial fibrillation | CT | China | Lacunar infarctions at the level of the insula, bilaterally, hippocampus and anterior temporal lobe, bilaterally. |
| Sparr and Bieri ( | Case series | 2 from a series of 4 cases (#1 and #3) | 84, 62 | 2/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension and diabetes mellitus | CT and MRI | USA | #1: Splenium of the corpus callosum; #3: Multiple bilateral cerebral and cerebellar infarctions and the right side of the splenium of the corpus callosum. |
| Jillella et al. ( | Case series | 10 from a sample of 13 (#2, #3, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #11, #12, #13) | 8 in their 60's, 2 in their 70's | 1/9 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Atrial fibrillation or flutter, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes, deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism | CT and MRI | USA | #2: Left parietal, right frontal and occipital lobe, bilaterally; #3: Right insula; #5: Left frontal and temporal lobe, bilaterally; #6: Left parieto-occipital; #7: Left temporo-parietal; #8: Right frontal, temporal and parietal; #9: Right thalamus, left cerebellum and left capsula; #11: Left frontal; #12: Basal ganglia, cerebellum and parieto-occipital lobe, bilaterally; #13: fronto-parietal regions. |
| Kananeh et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 from a sample of 4 (#2) | 70 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Atrial fibrillation (new onset) | CT | USA | The majority of the right hemisphere. |
| Tiwari et al. ( | Case series | 8 from a sample of 16 (#8, #9, #11, #12, #13, #14, #15, #16) | 73, 82, 80, 74, 60, 62, 64, 67 | 4/4 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia | Hypertension, previous cerebrovascular accident, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure | CT and MRI | USA | #8: Left parieto-occipital; #9: Left frontal; #11: Basal ganglia and capsula; #12: Thalamus and capsula; #13: Capsula; #14: Left putamen; #15: Unspecified right territory; #16: Left parieto-occipital. |
| Ghani et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 3 cases | 61 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | Diabetes | CT | USA | Scattered subarachnoid haemorrhages and a subdural hematoma involving the cerebellum. |
| Benger et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 5 cases | 54 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | None reported | CT and MRI | UK | Posterior division of the right capsule. |
| Keaney and Mumtaz ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 2 cases | 72 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | Hypertension, type 2 diabetes, mild asthma | CT | UK | Extensive damage to the right hemisphere including frontal, temporal and parietal lobes. |
| Sharifi-Razavi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 79 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | None reported | CT | Iran | Extensive damage in the right temporal lobe. |
| Roy-Gash et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 63 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | None reported | CT and MRI | France | Bilateral temporal. |
| Al-Dalahmah et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 73 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | Hypertension, type 2 diabetes | CT | USA | Large portion of the cerebellum. |
| Muhammad et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 60 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | None reported | CT | Germany | Ruptured aneurysm with damage of left ventromedial prefrontal cortex. |
| Fitsiori et al. ( | Case series | 7 out of 9 cases (#A, #C, #D, #F, #G, #I, #J) | 66, 76, 78, 79, 65, 72, 62 | 1/6 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | COPD, human immunodeficiency virus, Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia, coronary artery disease, cardiac valvulopathy, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, prostate cancer, diabetes, dyslipidaemia, sleep apnoea, MCI, vitiligo and obesity | MRI | Switzerland | #A: Microbleeds in subcortical white matter, corpus callosum, basal ganglia, right anterior limb of the anterior capsule and left middle cerebellar peduncle; #C: Microbleeds in the corpus callosum, subcortical white matter and left parietal lobe; #D: Microbleeds in subcortical white matter, corpus callosum, left middle cerebellar peduncle and lacunar infarct in the external capsule; #F: Microbleeds in subcortical white matter and corpus callosum; #G: Lacunar infarcts in subcortical white matter, microbleeds in corpus callosum, middle cerebellar peduncle, posterior limb of the internal capsule, subcortical white matter and pontine myelinolysis; #I: Infarct in the centrum semiovale, microbleeds in the corpus callosum, subcortical white matter, posterior limb of the internal capsule, left middle cerebellar peduncle and cerebellum; #J: Microbleeds in corpus callosum and posterior limb of the internal capsule. |
| Pavlov et al. ( | Case series | 2 from a sample of 3 (#2, #3) | 64, 60 | 0/2 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | Hypertension, smoking history, type 2 diabetes, type 1 diabetes, hyperlipidaemia | CT | Russia | #2: Right basal ganglia, capsula; #3: Right ganglia, capsula, posterior temporal. |
| Sabayan et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 15 cases (#9) | 60 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage | Hypertension | CT | Iran | Parietal lobe, bilaterally. |
| Radmanesh et al. ( | Retrospective database analysis | 242 (n = 6 with neuroimaging description: #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6) | 68.7 (16.7) | 92/150 (2/4) | Cerebrovascular—haemorrhage (#1, #2), ischaemia (#3, #4, #5, #6) | Not systematically described (#1: stented carotid artery, #2: hepatic cirrhosis) | CT and MRI | USA | #1: Right temporal lobe; #2: Left superior parietal regions; #3: Left inferior frontal regions; #4: Right-sided damage extending to the frontal and temporal lobe, capsula and basal ganglia; #5: Left lateral cerebellum; #6: Cingulate gyrus and body of the corpus callosum. |
| Hernández-Fernández et al. ( | Retrospective database analysis | 12 from a sample of 23 (#2, #4, #5, #8, #10, #11, #12, #19, #20, #21, #22, #23) | 83, 65, 75, 76, 62, 86, 65, 69, 61, 64, 68, 66 | 1/11 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia (#2, #4, #5, #8, #10, #11, #12), ischaemia and haemorrhage (#19, #21), haemorrhage (#20, #22), encephalopathy and haemorrhage (#23) | Hypertension, dyslipidaemia, ischaemic cardiopathy, rheumatic valve disease and atrial fibrillation, smoking, schizophrenia, type 2 diabetes, COPD, vitamin B12 deficiency, stable angina, sleep apnoea | CT and MRI | Spain | #2: Bilateral cerebellum, left thalamus and occipital regions; #4: Right fronto-temporal regions; #5: Right parietal regions, thalamus and left frontal lobe; #8: Right insula; #10: Cerebellum; #11: Left insula; #12: Right parietal lobe; #19: Extensive left frontal and small right frontal haemorrhages; Bilateral parieto-occipital FLAIR hyperintensities; #20: Left lateral temporal extending to the Sylvian fissure; #21: Multiple foci of cortical-subcortical and subarachnoid haemorrhage in temporal and occipital regions; Bilateral parieto-occipital and cerebellar hyperintensities; #22: Left ventrolateral prefrontal regions and right parieto-occipital white matter; #23: Leukoencephalopathy in the right posterior frontal lobe and in parietal-occipital regions bilaterally (with microbleeding). |
| Beyrouti et al. ( | Case series | 5 from a series of 6 cases (#1, #3, #4, #5, #6) | 64, 85, 61, 83, 73 | 0/5 | Cerebrovascular—Ischaemia and haemorrhage (#1), ischaemia (#3, #4, #5 and #6) | Hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, atrial fibrillation, ischaemic heart disease, prostate cancer, stroke, chronic leg ulcers, diabetes, smoking and alcohol consumption, Gastric carcinoma and benign essential tremor | CT and MRI | UK | #1: Left inferior posterior cerebellar petechial haemorrhage and ischaemia in posteromedial temporal, occipital and thalamic territory; #3: Left temporal stem and cerebral peduncle; #4: Right striatum; #5: Right anterior-temporal and lateral temporal/perisylvian; #6: Ischaemia in the left haemi-pons and right parieto-occipital patchy pattern. |
| Fan et al. ( | Case series (from a cohort) | 7 from a cohort of 86 cases with AIS | All in the age range 65-70 y.o. | 2/5 | Cerebrovascular— ischaemia (#1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6) and haemorrhage (#7) | Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease, ischaemic stroke, hyperlipidaemia, ischaemic stroke in the cerebellum, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, myocardial infarction developed after COVID-19 onset and COPD | CT | China | #1: Right occipital lobe and bilateral frontal and parietal lobes; #2: Left hemisphere and bilateral occipito-temporal regions; #3: Parieto-frontal regions, bilaterally; #4: Right hemisphere; #5: Left midbrain; #6: In proximity of the right periventricular tissue; #7: Sub-arachnoid space and lateral ventricles. |
| Saggese et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 62 | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia and haemorrhage | Hypertension, diabetes, previous smoker, and previous myocardial infarction | CT | Italy | Bilateral basal fronto-temporal area of ischaemia with left haemorrhagic transformation. |
| Chougar et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 72 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia and haemorrhage | None reported | CT and MRI | France | Bilateral hypo/hyperdensities in various areas, including thalamus, basal ganglia, internal capsule, splenium of the corpus callosum, deep white matter, cerebral peduncle and pons. |
| Jaunmuktane et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 2 cases | #2 in her 60's | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia and haemorrhage | Hypertension | MRI | UK | Involvement of multiple brain regions, including the right thalamus, the right intraparietal sulcus, and bilateral cerebellum. |
| Mohamed et al. ( | Single case | 1 | Patient in her 70's | 1/0 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia and haemorrhage | Severe obesity, asthma and diabetes | CT | UK | Left ischaemic infarction with areas of haemorrhage involving frontal-to-occipital territory. |
| Hanafi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 65 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia and haemorrhage | None reported | CT and MRI | France | Ischaemic foci in deep white matter and centrum semiovale, basal ganglia, middle cerebellar peduncle and cerebellum; haemorrhage in the globus pallidus, bilaterally. |
| Chen et al. ( | Case series | 5 from a sample of 11 (#2, #3, #5, #6, #8) | 81, 68, 87, 70, 89 | 4/1 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia (#2, #5, #6, #8) and haemorrhage (#3) | Hypertension and diabetes (none in 3 cases) | CT | China | #2: Left fronto-temporal; #3: Brainstem; #5: Pons; #6: Left parietal; #8: Basal ganglia. |
| Sierra-Hidalgo et al. ( | Case series | 6 from a sample of 8 (#1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #7) | 78, 83, 77, 60, 76, 61 | 1/5 | Cerebrovascular—ischaemia (#1, #2, #3, #5) and ischaemia and haemorrhage (#4, #7) | Hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidaemia, atrial fibrillation, coronary heart disease | CT | Spain | #1: Left temporo-occipital; #2: Left fronto-temporal; #3: Left basal ganglia and fronto-temporal cortex; #4: Frontal and parietal regions, bilaterally, with right frontal haemorrhagic transformation; #5: Right posterior parietal; #7: Right cerebellum and mediotemporal, bilaterally, with haemorrhagic transformation in right mediotemporal and bilateral frontal, temporal and occipital regions. |
| Oliveira et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 69 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—vasculitis | Hypertension | MRI | Brazil | Regional vasculitis (at the level of the brainstem) with no nervous tissue involvement. |
| Franceschi et al. ( | Single case (from a case series) | 1 out of 2 cases | 67 | 0/1 | Cerebrovascular—encephalopathy and haemorrhage | Hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, gout and asthma | CT and MRI | USA | Oedemas in the right frontal lobe, basal ganglia, cerebellum and parieto-occipital regions, with superimposed haemorrhage in the right parieto-occipital territory. |
| Benameur et al. ( | Single case (#3 from a case series) | 1 | 64 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy and encephalitis | None reported | MRI | USA | Non-enhancing abnormality in the right anterior-medial temporal lobe. |
| Farhadian et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 78 | 1/0 | Encephalopathy and encephalitis | History of kidney transplant, on immunosuppression | MRI | USA | Atrophy and widespread periventricular and subcortical WM hyperintensities due to small vessel ischaemic disease across all lobes. |
| Hayashi et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 75 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy and encephalitis | Mild AD | MRI | Japan | One reversible hyperintense area in the splenium of the corpus callosum. |
| Abdelnour et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 69 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy, encephalitis, cerebrovascular | Hypertension, type 2 diabetes and mild chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | MRI | UK | No abnormalities apart from old infarcts in the left frontal, parietal and occipital lobes. |
| Mahammedi et al. ( | Case series | 108 | 71 (60.5-79) | 39/69 | Encephalopathy, encephalitis, cerebrovascular | Hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, malignancy, MS, HIV, Behçet disease, haemoglobinopathy | CT and MRI | Italy | Neuroimaging abnormalities in 51 out of 108 cases: mostly acute ischaemic infarcts (34 out of 51), especially in the MCA territory, but in the basal ganglia in seven cases; six intracranial haemorrhages (location not specified); WM lesions in subcortical WM and the basal ganglia; rare encephalopathies in three cases and PRES in 1 case. |
| Paterson et al. ( | Case series | 15 (out of 43) | 60-85 | 3/12 | Encephalopathy (#1, #2, #8), encephalitis (#12, #14, #19), cerebrovascular (#23, #24, #25, #28, #29) and PNS signs (#31, #33, #35, #38) | CADASIL, previous right occipital stroke, TIA, bladder cancer, nephrectomy, hypercholesterolemia, hypothyroidism, hysterectomy, osteoarthritis, degenerative spine disease, diabetes, hypertension, cellulitis, increased BMI, Conn Syndrome, recurrent DVT, atrial fibrillation, ischaemic heart disease, prostate cancer (Gleason Score 4+5), gastric carcinoma, benign essential tremor, cluster headache, cervical myelopathy, arrhythmia, depression, myeloma, cerebellar stroke | CT and MRI | UK | |
| Pons-Escoda et al. ( | Cohort | 103 | 74 (50-90) | 40/63 | Encephalopathy, encephalitis, cerebrovascular | Only patients with cerebrovascular accidents: hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, smoker, atrial fibrillation | CT and MRI | Spain | No abnormalities due to COVID-19 infection in 80 patients; 23 with mainly vascular damages: one basilar strip aneurysm, one cerebellar aneurysm, three basal ganglia haematomas, one left parietal haematoma, three lobar haematomas (location not specified), one cerebellar small vessel infarction, two left prefrontal infarctions, three small vessel and eight large vessel occlusions (location not specified), one left parietal haemorrhage due to TBI. |
| Helms et al. ( | Case series | 58 | 63 | Not reported | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | TIA, epilepsy, MCI (in seven out of 58) | MRI (only in 13 cases) | France | Leptomeningeal enhancements in eight cases (occipito-parietal and right frontal in one case and left parietal in another case); bilateral fronto-temporal hypoperfusion in 11 cases; cerebral ischaemic stroke in three cases (right cerebellar in one case). |
| Helms et al. ( | Cohort | 140 (118 with delirium) | 62 (52–70) | 40/100; with delirium: 29/89 | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | Stroke, TIA; epilepsy, MCI, migraine, TBI, aneurysm, cardiovascular diseases, haemopathies, immune diseases, diabetes, chronic liver disease, chronic renal disease, COPD, asthma, OSA | MRI (only in 32 cases with severe delirium) | France | WM microhaemorrhages across all lobes and cerebellum in seven cases and one left frontal intraparenchymal haematoma; WM hyperintensities in four cases (location not specified); subarachnoid enhancements in 17 cases (location not specified); cerebral ischaemic stroke in three cases (location not specified); hypoperfusion in 17 cases, especially in medial temporal and right frontal areas. |
| Krett et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 69 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | Hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease | CT and MRI | Canada | CT assessment at hospital admission and after 13 days showed no abnormalities and no vasculopathy. MRI at day 13 showed diffuse multicompartmental haemorrhages (location not specified), including subarachnoid, with surrounding oedema. |
| Lin et al. ( | Cohort | 278 (with CT/MRI) | 71.8 (15.4) | 113/165 | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | Atrial fibrillation, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes, coronary artery disease, chronic kidney disease, COPD | CT and MRI | USA | |
| Nicholson et al. ( | Single case (#3 from a case series) | 1 | 62 | 0/1 | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | None reported | CT and MRI | Canada | No abnormalities on CT. On MRI: enhancements in the subarachnoid and subpial spaces (no location specified); widespread hyperintensities along small cortical veins (no location specified); abnormal signal in subcortical areas, especially the corpus callosum. |
| Radmanesh et al. ( | Case series | 5 from a series of 11 cases (#3, #5, #6, #10 and #11) | 60, 64, 63, 64, 62 | 2/3 | Encephalopathy, cerebrovascular | Hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, hyperlipidaemia, atrial fibrillation, obesity | MRI | USA | All cases: leukoencephalopathy in bilateral deep and subcortical WM, especially in posterior regions of temporal and occipital horns; abnormalities in precentral gyrus juxtacortical WM, centrum semiovale and corona radiata; no abnormalities in deep GM nuclei. In four cases: microhaemorrhages, mostly acute, especially in juxtacortical WM and the splenium of the corpus callosum. |
| Al-Dalahmah et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 73 | 0/1 | Neuropathology examination (and CT) | Hypertension, type 2 diabetes | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | USA | |
| Hernández-Fernández et al. ( | Case series | 2 (#19 and #20, out of 23 cases) | 69, 61 | 0/2 | Neuropathology examination (and CT) | Hypertension, dyslipidaemia | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | Spain | |
| Jaunmuktane et al. ( | Case series | 2 | F in her 60's, M in his 50's | 1/1 | Neuropathology examination (and MRI) | Hypertension | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | UK | |
| Bradley et al. ( | Case series | 5 (with brain examination out of 14 cases) | 57, 76, 84, 81, 42 | 3/2 | Neuropathology examination | End-stage renal disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, OSA, obesity, osteoporosis, hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease, COPD, mitral regurgitation, complete heart block, chronic pain, arthritis, breast cancer, demyelinating neuropathy, lacunar infarcts, pneumonia, AD, anaemia | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | USA | |
| Buja et al. ( | Case series | 3 (with brain examination out of 23 cases) | 77, 42, 48 | 0/3 | Neuropathology examination | Obesity, hypertension, splenectomy, myotonic dystrophy | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | USA | |
| Bulfamante et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 54 | 0/1 | Neuropathology examination | None reported | Microscopic ultrastructural examinations of ON, GR and MO | Italy | Severe and widespread damage to neurons, glia, axons and myelin sheath (ON > GR > MO); detection of viral particles compatible with COVID-19; preservation of mitochondria. |
| Kantonen et al. ( | Case series | 4 | 63, 82, 38, 90 | 1/3 | Neuropathology examination | Hypertension, gout, chronic kidney disease, smoking, sick sinus syndrome, coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, peripheral artery disease, stroke, PD, type 2 diabetes, COPD, colorectal cancer, obesity, retinopathy, polyneuropathy, cellulitis, asthma, AD, osteoporosis, spinal stenosis, lung infection | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | Finland | |
| Matschke et al. ( | Case series | 43 | 76 (70–86) | 16/27 | Neuropathology examination | COPD, dementia, ischaemic heart disease, renal insufficiency, atrial fibrillation, cardiac insufficiency, myelofibrosis, emphysema, hypertension, diabetes, stroke, aortic aneurysm, cardiac hypertrophy, acute myeloid leukaemia, cardiomyopathy, thyroid cancer, PD, trisomy 21, epilepsy, hypoxic brain damage, cardiac arrhythmia, OSA, ulcerative colitis, lung granuloma, aortic valve replacement, hypothyroidism, lung cancer, colon cancer, paranoid schizophrenia, myelodysplastic syndrome, liver cirrhosis, dysphagia, multiple myeloma | Macroscopic and, for 23 out of 43, microscopic examinations of OB, SFC, basal ganglia (including the putamen), upper and lower medulla oblongata, cerebellar hemispheres | Germany | |
| Menter et al. ( | Case series | 3 + 1 | 68, 96, 71 | 1/2 | Neuropathology examination | Hypertension, atherosclerosis, obesity, MS, PD, dementia, coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, peripheral arterial disease, infrarenal aortic aneurysm, coronary heart disease, valvulopathy, double bypass | Microscopic examinations | Switzerland | No inflammatory infiltrates or neuronal necrosis in any of the cases; mild hypoxic injury in three of the cases; hydrocephalus internus in two cases; pathological changes consistent with neurological comorbidities (MS and PD); COVID-19 presence in the brain was less prominent than in other organs, higher presence in the olfactory bulb than in the brainstem. |
| Reichard et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 71 | 0/1 | Neuropathology examination | ischaemic heart disease, coronary artery atherosclerosis | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | USA | |
| Remmelink et al. ( | Case series | 11 (with brain examination out of 17 cases) | 77, 68, 64, 56, 66, 49, 63, 75, 61, 70, 53 | 3/8 | Neuropathology examination | Coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, COPD, cancer, hypertension, chronic renal failure, liver transplant | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations | Belgium | |
| Youd and Moore ( | Case series | 9 (3 positive to COVID-19, 3 likely false negatives, 3 with other respiratory infections) | 88, 86, 73, 67, 33, 70, 87, 77, 68 | 5/4 | Neuropathology examination | Type 1 an type 2 diabetes, hypertension, COPD, asthma, heart diseases, dementia, DVT, alcoholism, PD, stroke, HIV | Macroscopic examinations | UK | No abnormalities in three cases; brain atrophy in case with COVID-19 and dementia; old infarct and head injury in one case; circle of Willis atheroma in four cases. |
| Hanley et al. ( | Case series | 9 (with brain analysis out of 10) | 61, 64, 69, 78, 22, 24, 79, 97, 79 | 2/7 | Neuropathology examination | COPD, ischaemic heart disease, migraine, prostatic hyperplasia, OSA, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, dementia, osteoarthritis, hypercholesterolaemia, trigeminal neuralgia, past bladder cancer, anaemia, glaucoma, alcohol-related liver disease, hypothyroidism, cutaneous systemic lupus erythematosus, vitamin B12 deficiency | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations on eight regions (unnamed) | UK | No necrosis was noted in any of the cases, apart from a macroscopic infarction; microglia activation and mild T cell infiltrations were observed in all the cases where these pathological features were examined (five cases); no mention of brain findings in three cases. Viral genetic material was detected in brain samples, but with variable load across cases. |
| Lee et al. ( | Case series | 19 | 50 (5–73) | 4/15 | Neuropathology examination | Obesity, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, old TBI, drug use disorders | Microscopic examinations and post-mortem 11.7T MRI of OB and brainstem (in 13 cases), but also frontal cortex, basal ganglia and cerebellum in some cases. | USA | On |
| Schurink et al. ( | Case series | 21 | 68 (41–78) | 5/16 | Neuropathology examination | Diabetes, cardiovascular disease, COPD, asthma, active solid malignancy, active haematological malignancy | Macroscopic and microscopic examinations covering all brain, spinal cord and meninges. Analysis of viral presence only in 11 cases. | The Netherlands | |
| Vaira et al. ( | Single case | 1 | 63 | 1/0 | Neuropathology examination | None | Biopsy of the left olfactory epithelium and MRI to investigate cause of anosmia due to COVID-19 | Italy | MRI exam showed no macrostructural abnormalities in the OB. |
Median (Interquartile range).
Mean (Standard deviation).
Median (595th percentile).
Median for the whole sample, but no data for the subgroup who underwent MRI assessments.
Not possible to track one case with neuropathological examination from all the materials made available.
Median (range).
ACA, Anterior cerebral artery; AD, Alzheimer's disease; ADEM, Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis; AIS, Acute ischaemic stroke; BMI, Body mass index; CA1, Cornu Ammonis 1; CADASIL, Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy; COPD, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CT, Computerised tomography; DVT, Deep-vein thrombosis; FDG-PET, Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography; GR, Gyrus rectus; MCA, Middle cerebral artery; MCI, Mild cognitive impairment; MO, Medulla oblongata; MRI, Magnetic resonance imaging; MS, Multiple sclerosis; OB, Olfactory bulb; ON, Olfactory nerve; OSA, Obstructive sleep apnoea; OFC, Orbitofrontal cortex; PCA, Posterior cerebral artery; PD, Parkinson's disease; PNS, Peripheral nervous system; PRES, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; SFC, Superior frontal cortex; TBI, Traumatic brain injury; TIA, Transient ischaemic attack; WM, White matter.
Figure 2Summary of the rates of null neuropathological findings.
Figure 3Summary of the most common neural findings across the brain.