| Literature DB >> 35883526 |
Francesco Cavallieri1, Valentina Fioravanti1, Francesco Bove2, Eleonora Del Prete3, Sara Meoni4, Sara Grisanti5, Marialuisa Zedde1, Rosario Pascarella6, Elena Moro4, Franco Valzania1.
Abstract
A few cases of parkinsonism linked to COVID-19 infection have been reported so far, raising the possibility of a post-viral parkinsonian syndrome. The objective of this review is to summarize the clinical, biological, and neuroimaging features of published cases describing COVID-19-related parkinsonism and to discuss the possible pathophysiological mechanisms. A comprehensive literature search was performed using NCBI's PubMed database and standardized search terms. Thirteen cases of COVID-19-related parkinsonism were included (7 males; mean age: 51 years ± 14.51, range 31-73). Patients were classified based on the possible mechanisms of post-COVID-19 parkinsonism: extensive inflammation or hypoxic brain injury within the context of encephalopathy (n = 5); unmasking of underlying still non-symptomatic Parkinson's Disease (PD) (n = 5), and structural and functional basal ganglia damage (n = 3). The various clinical scenarios show different outcomes and responses to dopaminergic treatment. Different mechanisms may play a role, including vascular damage, neuroinflammation, SARS-CoV-2 neuroinvasive potential, and the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on α-synuclein. Our results confirm that the appearance of parkinsonism during or immediately after COVID-19 infection represents a very rare event. Future long-term observational studies are needed to evaluate the possible role of SARS-CoV-2 infection as a trigger for the development of PD in the long term.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Parkinson’s Disease; SARS-CoV-2; extrapyramidal; parkinsonism
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35883526 PMCID: PMC9313170 DOI: 10.3390/biom12070970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Clinical context of the 13 patients included in the analysis.
| Reference | Age | Sex | Comorbidities | COVID-19 Symptoms | COVID-19 Severity | COVID-19 Treatment | Days to Parkinsonian Features Onset after First COVID Symptoms | Genetic Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ayele et al., 2021 [ | 35 | Female | None | Fluctuating mentation, abnormal behavior, fever, visual hallucination | Mild | 13 | N/A | |
| Ong et al., 2021 [ | 31 | Male | None | Fever, cough, shortness of breath | Severe | Oxygen, dexamethasone, favipiravir, subcutaneous low-molecular-weight heparin. | 15 | N/A |
| Cavallieri et al., 2021 [ | 67 | Male | None | Dyspnea, fever, anosmia, ageusia | Severe | Tocilizumab | 120 | Heterozygous variant in the GBA gene (NM_000157.3:c.1223C > T-p.(Thr408Met); [T369M]). |
| Cavallieri et al., 2021 [ | 45 | Male | None | Fever, anosmia and ageusia | Mild | 90 | Heterozygous variant in the PRKN gene (chr6:162683546–1 62683807NM_004562; exons:3) | |
| Fearon et al., 2021 [ | 46 | Male | None | Fever, dyspnea, cough, ARDS, acute renal failure, DIC | Critical | ICU admission, Intubation and ventilation, dialysis | N/A | N/A |
| Tiraboschi et al., 2021 [ | 40 | Female | Overweight | Fever, anosmia, fatigue, dyspnea and one syncope | Critical | ICU admission, intubation, and ventilation | 82 | N/A |
| Morassi et al., 2021 [ | 70 | Female | Hypertension, anxiety–depressive disorder. | Fever, cough, dysgeusia, bilateral pneumonia | Severe | Darunavir, ritonavir, hydroxychloroquine | 47 | N/A |
| Morassi et al., 2021 [ | 73 | Female | Hypertension, mixed anxiety–depressive disorder. | Fever, unilateral pneumonia | Moderate | 0 | N/A | |
| Makhoul et al., 2021 [ | 64 | Female | N/A | Fever, fatigue, loss of smell | Mild | 5 | N/A | |
| Cohen et al., 2020 [ | 45 | Male | Hypertension, asthma | Dry cough, muscle pain, loss of smell, fatigue, shortness of breath. | Moderate | 17 | Negative | |
| Faber et al., 2020 [ | 35 | Female | N/A | Fever, cough, diarrhea, myalgia, anosmia, hypogeusia | Mild | 10 | N/A | |
| Mendez-Guerrero et al., 2020 [ | 58 | Male | Hypertension, asthma | Cough, fever, nausea, and shortness of breath, ARDS | Critical | Hydroxychloroquine; Lopinavir/ritonavir, tocilizumab; INF-beta | 32 | N/A |
| Roy et al., 2020 [ | 60 | Male | Hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia | Hypoxic respiratory failure, septic shock, ventricular tachycardia, acute renal failure | Critical | Intubation and mechanic ventilation, convalescent plasma, hemodialysis | 41 | N/A |
Abbreviations: ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome; GBA: glucocerebrosidase; ICU: intensive care unit, INF: interferon; N/A: not available; PRKN: parkin.
Neuroimaging findings and treatment of the 13 patients included in the analysis.
| Reference | Parkinsonian Features | Side Involved | Functional Imaging | Brain-MRI | CSF Analysis | Dopaminergic Treatment | Other Treatments | Outcome | Possible Mechanisms of Post-COVID-19 Parkinsonism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ayele et al., 2021 [ | Right hand resting tremor, bradykinesia, oromandibular dystonia, rigidity, hypomimia, hypophonia | Bilateral | N/A | Symmetrical T2 and FLAIR hyperintense lesions in both pallidal regions | Unremarkable | Levodopa/carbidopa 250/25 mg half tablet 3/day | IV acyclovir, dexamethasone | Improvement | BG damage |
| Ong et al., 2021 [ | Reduced eye blinking, mild bilateral upper limb rigidity, slow finger tapping and absence of arm swing | Bilateral | N/A | Symmetrical T2/FLAIR thalamic hyperintensities with hemosiderin deposition and patchy contrast enhancement. | Mildly elevated protein level. | N/A | IV methylprednisolone, trihexyphenidyl | Significant improvement | Inflammation or hypoxic brain injury in encephalopathy |
| Cavallieri et al., 2021 [ | Right hand resting tremor, bilateral bradykinesia rigidity, (MDS-UPDRS-III: 12/132). | bilateral | Mild bilateral reduction in presynaptic dopaminergic uptake | Bilateral mild white matter hyperintensities in the centrum semiovale and external capsule | N/A | Levodopa 300 mg/day | N/A | Good outcome | Unmasking non symptomatic PD |
| Cavallieri et al., 2021 [ | Mild resting tremor in left leg and left hand bradykinesia (MDS-UPDRS- III: 4/132) | Left | Decreased dopamine transporter density in both putamens | Unremarkable | N/A | Pramipexole 1.05 mg extended release 1/day | N/A | Good outcome | Unmasking non symptomatic PD |
| Fearon et al., 2021 [ | Hypophonia, hypomimia, asymmetric rigidity and bradykinesia, freezing of gait, postural instability. | Bilateral | N/A | CT scan/Brain MRI: bilateral edema in the globus pallidus and deep cerebellar nuclei with hemorrhagic foci. | N/A | Levodopa 450 mg/day | N/A | Lack of improvement one year after COVID-19 infection | BG damage |
| Tiraboschi et al., 2021 [ | Parkinsonism | Bilateral | N/A | Unremarkable | Positive for anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies and elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines. | N/A | Two IVIg cycles | Complete resolution of symptoms | Inflammation or hypoxic brain injury in encephalopathy |
| Morassi et al., 2021 [ | Generalized hypertonia, cogwheel rigidity, bradykinesia hypomimia, hypophonia | Bilateral | Bilateral decrease in presynaptic dopamine involving both putamina, more severe on the left side | Slight enlargement of the ventricular system; fronto-parietal and occipital cortical thinning; fronto-temporal increased cortical thickness. | Decreased amyloid β42, increased total Tau protein | Carbidopa/levodopa (100/25 mg qid) | Corticosteroids followed by five days IVIGs 0.4 g/Kg/die | Modest effect of levodopa. 9 months after presentation: mRS = 4. | Inflammation or hypoxic brain injury in encephalopathy |
| Morassi et al., 2021 [ | Bilateral hypokinetic-rigid syndrome. | Bilateral | N/A | Unremarkable | Increased protein content and four oligoclonal bands. | Levodopa/carbidopa up to 100/25 mg qid | Corticosteroids, IVIGs | The patient died of medical complications | Inflammation or hypoxic brain injury in encephalopathy |
| Makhoul et al., 2021 [ | Rest tremor in her left arm, minimal hypomimia and mild left-sided bradykinesia and rigidity | bilateral | decreased uptake in the right putamen | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Unmasking non symptomatic PD |
| Cohen et al., 2020 [ | Right more than left tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity | Bilateral | Decreased uptake in bilateral putamen more apparent on the left | Normal | Unremarkable | 0.375 mg pramipexole extended release, once daily, biperiden 4 mg daily. | N/A | Tremor improvement after biperiden introduction | Unmasking non symptomatic PD |
| Faber et al., 2020 [ | Right rigidity, bradykinesia hypophonia, hypomimia, | Bilateral | Decreased left putamen uptake | Unremarkable | Levodopa/benserazide 200/50 mg three times a day | N/A | Improvement after levodopa introduction | Unmasking non symptomatic PD | |
| Mendez-Guerrero et al., 2020 [ | Right side–dominant hypokinetic-rigid syndrome, with mixed postural and resting tremor. | Bilateral | Decreased uptake in bilateral putamen more apparent on the left | Unremarkable | Unremarkable | Apomorphine test (3 mg) | N/A | Improvement without any specific treatment | Inflammation or hypoxic brain injury in encephalopathy |
| Roy et al., 2020 [ | Diffuse hypokinetic rigid syndrome | Bilateral | N/A | Basal ganglia and corona radiata stroke. | Carbidopa–levodopa 100/25 mg three times a day | N/A | The patient was able to discharge to home after 30 days at the acute rehabilitation center. | BG damage |
Abbreviations: BG: basal ganglia; MDS-UPDRS: MDS Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale; N/A: not available; IV: intravenous; IVIGs: intravenous immunoglobulins; PD: Parkinson’s disease; 3.1.1. Extensive inflammation or hypoxic brain injury within the context of encephalopathy (n = 5).