FWIW, the study I posted earlier is one of 2 Eric Topol mentioned in his blog.
>>>[T]his week, 2 new publications have substantially added to our understanding of the extent that Covid can impair cognitive function across the full gamut— from young, healthy individuals with mild infections to older, hospitalized patients with severe Covid.<<<
Two important studies this week shed new light on after-effects, 1-year out, and other key updates
erictopol.substack.com
Here's the other study:
A national prospective study of patients requiring hospitalization for COVID-19 demonstrates global cognitive deficits at one-year, associated with elevated brain injury markers and reduced grey matter volume.
www.nature.com
Here are his comments on the other study:
>>>The main findings, some of which are summarized in the graphic below, were:
- Significant reduction in cognitive performance scores in all of the 8 case clusters compared with controls, especially executive function, worse among those by severity of Covid, abnormal mental health status of encephalopathy during the acute phase.
- Substantial and persistent, ongoing increase in brain injury markers in the COVID and NeuroCOVID patients—NFL, Tau, GFAP and UCH-L1. Serum GFAP is expressed by astrocytes, which are key immune mediators, and supports the mechanism of injury is immune-mediated.
- Gray matter atrophy, particularly seen in the volume of the anterior cingulate cortex.
- Subjective symptoms of cognitive impairment were correlated with objective findings. In addition, depression was frequently reported.
- By the Global Deviation from Expected (GDfE) score assessment, the cognitive deficits were equivalent to a 20-year acceleration (e.g. performance of a 50-year old at the 70-year old level)
Cognitive deficits were more likely in patients with a neurologic or psychiatric complication, older age, more comorbidities, There was some protection noted with higher educational level and in-hospital treatment with dexamethasone.<<<
This is somewhat interesting to me, but YMMV.