| Literature DB >> 34149397 |
Rajkumar Singh Kalra1, Jaspreet Kaur Dhanjal2, Avtar Singh Meena3, Vishal C Kalel4, Surya Dahiya5, Birbal Singh6, Saikat Dewanjee7, Ramesh Kandimalla8,9.
Abstract
The spectrum of health complications instigated by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19, caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 or SARS-CoV-2) pandemic has been diverse and complex. Besides the evident pulmonary and cardiovascular threats, accumulating clinical data points to several neurological complications, which are more common in elderly COVID-19 patients. Recent pieces of evidence have marked events of neuro infection and neuroinvasion, producing several neurological complications in COVID-19 patients; however, a systematic understanding of neuro-pathophysiology and manifested neurological complications, more specifically in elderly COVID-19 patients is largely elusive. Since the elderly population gradually develops neurological disorders with aging, COVID-19 inevitably poses a higher risk of neurological manifestations to the aged patients. In this report, we reviewed SARS-CoV-2 infection and its role in neurological manifestations with an emphasis on the elderly population. We reviewed neuropathological events including neuroinfection, neuroinvasion, and their underlying mechanisms affecting neuromuscular, central- and peripheral- nervous systems. We further assessed the imminent neurological challenges in the COVID-19 exposed population, post-SARS-CoV-2-infection. Given the present state of clinical preparedness, the emerging role of AI and machine learning was also discussed concerning COVID-19 diagnostics and its management. Taken together, the present review summarizes neurological outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection and associated complications, specifically in elderly patients, and underlines the need for their clinical management in advance.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; aging; neurodegenerative disease; neuroinfection; neuroinvasion; neuropathology; pandemic
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149397 PMCID: PMC8209245 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.662786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) neuro-pathophysiology: COVID-19 clinical manifestations associated with diverse neuronal systems/organs including the peripheral nerve, parenchymal, cerebrovascular, meningeal, spinal cord, neuromuscular, and cranial nerve in SARS-CoV-2-infected patients.
Summary of common peripheral nervous system (PNS), central nervous system (CNS), cerebrovascular, and intracerebral neurological complications in elderly Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients.
| Neurological complications | Manifestations | Investigation/Region/ Study type | Clinical features/Symptoms | COVID-19 Diagnostics | Neurological investigation (CSF scans, neuroimaging, neurophysiology) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNS disease | Encephalitis | Sohal and Mansur ( | 72-year-old male patient. Weakness and lightheadedness. Altered mental status; Seizures (On day 2 post-hospitalization). | RT-PCR + ve | Head CT: no acute changes. 24-h EEG: six left temporal seizures and left temporal sharp waves that were epileptogenic. |
| Paniz-Mondolfi et al. ( | 74-year-old male patient. History of Parkinson’s disease. Fever, confusion, and agitation. | RT-PCR + ve (nasopharyngeal) | Head CT: no acute changes. | ||
| Zhou et al. ( | 56-year-old patient. SARS-CoV-2 infection and pneumonia. | SARS-CoV2 + ve (CSF sequencing) | NR | ||
| Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis | Zanin et al. ( | 54-year-old female patient. Agitation, decreased consciousness, and seizures after many days of ageusia and anosmia. | RT-PCR + ve | CSF: normal; Brain and spine MRI: periventricular confluent white matter lesions. Numerous cord lesions from (bulbomedullary junction to T6 level). | |
| Myelitis | Zhao et al. ( | 66-year-old male patient. Fever, dyspnoea, and asthma. Developed acute flaccid paralysis of lower limbs (5 days after the beginning of respiratory symptom). Urinary and fecal incontinence. Sensory level at T10. | RT-PCR + ve (nasopharyngeal) | Brain CT: lacunar infarcts; spinal imaging not done | |
| PNS disease | Guillain-Barré syndrome | Camdessanche et al. ( | 64-year-old male patient. Developed paraesthesia and progressive weakness in all limbs. Areflexia and loss of vibration sense. Later developed dysphagia and respiratory insufficiency. | RT-PCR + ve (nasopharyngeal) | CSF: normal. Nerve conduction and electromyography: acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. |
| Zhao et al. ( | 61-year-old female patient. Progressive weakness of limbs and severe fatigue. Areflexia in lower limbs and reduced sensation distally. Dry cough and fever (after 7 days). | RT-PCR + ve (oropharyngeal) | CSF: normal. Nerve conduction study: acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. | ||
| GBS variants and other neuropathies | Miller-Fisher Syndrome | Gutierrez-Ortiz et al. ( | 64-year-old male patient. Cough, fever, malaise, anosmia, headache, and ageusia. Developed right inter-nuclear opthalmoparesis with right fascicular oculomotor palsy, ataxia, and areflexia. | RT-PCR + ve(oropharyngeal) | CSF: normal. Brain CT with contrast: normal. |
| Ophthalmoplegia | Dinkin et al. ( | 71-year-old female patient. Had isolated ophthalmoplegia (post-few days of cough and fever; right abducens palsy). | RT-PCR + ve (nasal) | CSF: normal opening pressure; brain MRI: enhancement of the optic nerve sheaths and posterior Tenon capsules. | |
| Rhabdomyolysis | Jin and Tong ( | 60-year-old male patient. Weakness and tenderness in lower limbs (15 days after beginning of fever and cough). | RT-PCR + ve (throat swab) | NR | |
| Cerebrovascular disease | Ischaemic stroke | Avula et al. ( | 4 patients (73–88 years old). Had hypertension; 3 had dyslipidaemia, 1 diabetes and neuropathy. 3 patients exhibited acute new focal neurological deficit and 1 showed altered mental status. | All RT-PCR + ve | All 4 had unifocal infarcts: 3 on CT, 1 on brain MRI. |
| Beyrouti et al. ( | 6 patients (53–83 years old. 5 male and 1 female). 3 had hypertension, 2 ischemic heart disease, 2 atrial fibrillations, 1 had previous stroke, and 1 was a heavy smoker and alcohol drinker. All had respiratory symptoms (at avg. 13 days) before or after neurological symptom onset. | All RT-PCR + ve | Scans (CT and brain MRI) showed unifocal infarcts in 4 patients. 1 had bilateral infarcts on a follow-up brain MRI; 2 had bilateral infarcts on initial scans. | ||
| Li et al. ( | 11 patients (57–91 years old; 6 female and 5 male). 9 had hypertension, 6 diabetes, 3 cardiovascular disease. All had respiratory symptoms (at avg. 11 days) before neurological symptoms onset. | All RT-PCR + ve | NR | ||
| Morassi et al. ( | 4 patients (64–82 years old). 3 had hypertension, 2 had a previous stroke or transient ischemic condition and aortic valve disease, and 1 was a smoker with a previous myocardial infarction. 3 developed neurological manifestations during hospitalization, 1 exhibited episodes of transient loss of consciousness. | All RT-PCR + ve (nasopharyngeal) | 1 patient had CSF: normal leukocyte count, protein, and IgG index. All had multifocal infarcts on brain CT or MRI; the patient presenting with transient loss of consciousness and ensuing confusion. | ||
| Intracerebral hemorrhage | Morassi et al. ( | 2 patients (57 years old). Admitted to hospital with critical COVID-19 condition; (at 14 and 17 days after onset of cough and fever), they had bilaterally fixed dilated pupils and coma (GCS 3/15). | Both RT-PCR + ve (nasopharyngeal) | 1 patient had bilateral cerebellar hemorrhages on brain CT with hydrocephalus; the other had a large frontal hemorrhage with displaced ventricles and multiple smaller hemorrhages. |
Figure 2Schematic diagram showing potential modes of SARS-CoV-2 neuroinfection via neuronal/nervous, epithelial-humoral, infected immune/lymphatic, and lymphatic-cerebrospinal fluid routes.