Persistent neuropsychological deficits in recovered COVID-19 patients: Correlations with disease biomarkers.

Journal: Applied Neuropsychology. Adult
Published:
Abstract

Cognitive impairment, including deficits in attention, memory, executive function, and processing speed, is common in post-COVID-19 conditions, though language performance remains less studied. The present study examined the long-term effects of COVID-19 condition on cognition and language - communication, and its associations with disease severity, Body Mass Index (BMI), inflammatory markers, and quality of life. Nighty eight Greek participants under 65 years of age were recruited for this study. Forty-seven participants were allocated in the COVID-19 group and 51 served as cognitively healthy controls. The COVID-19 group was categorized by disease severity and long COVID status. Assessments occurred 12 weeks post-infection, with 12 patients reevaluated after another 12 weeks. Neurocognitive tests included ABCD-II, verbal fluency, CCT, SDMT, and Euro QoL EQ-5D. Blood samples were analyzed for inflammatory markers. Covid-19 survivors experienced significant cognitive deficits compared to healthy controls, particularly in processing speed, memory, and verbal fluency. Long COVID patients showed notably lower scores in processing speed and QoL, compared to those without Long COVID. However, no significant differences were observed between groups on episodic memory and executive functions tasks. Cognitive deficits were associated with biomarkers such as d-dimers and C-Reactive protein, with elevated d-dimers linked to poorer performance on generative drawing and cognitive flexibility. Higher education served as a protective factor, and was associated with higher scores in tasks such as story retelling, confrontation naming, generative drawing and reading comprehension. Older age and higher Body Mass Index were associated with poorer cognitive performance, especially on processing speed. Sex appears to influence language comprehension outcomes, with males exhibiting enhanced performance on the reading comprehension-sentence task. Disease severity negatively affected performance on the Symbol Digit Modalities Test and generative naming, indicating that greater severity was linked to poorer outcomes in these domains. Follow-up evaluations of recovered COVID-19 patients revealed significant improvements in processing speed and recall, suggesting partial recovery in these areas, although some deficits persisted over time. The study supports findings that the prolonged effects of COVID-19 markedly impaired neurocognitive functions in recovering patients, especially those with severe or long COVID syndrome. Moreover, while several cognitive domains may improve over time, many other domains remain impaired and vulnerable.

Relevant Conditions

Long Haul COVID, COVID-19