From long COVID to neurodegeneration
Carpio-Orantes, Luis Del
No abstract. Snippets:
Web | DOI | PMC | PDF | Brain Circulation | Commentary | Jan-Mar 2025
Carpio-Orantes, Luis Del
No abstract. Snippets:
[SARS-CoV-2] has a great predilection for the nervous system, being a neuroinvasive virus that uses various routes such as olfactory pathway, ophthalmic pathway, choroid plexuses, enteric nervous system and the disruption of the blood–brain barrier (BBB); once installed in the nervous system it begins with a great neurotropism that will finally culminate in great neurovirulence, conditioning various pathological conditions.
The main mechanisms of cognitive dysfunction are viral persistence, immunothrombosis, fusion of neurons with glial cells, neuroinflammation, decreased neurogenesis, hypocortisolism due to dysfunction of the hypothalamus–pituitary axis, and vagal dysfunction induced by dysbiosis.[1-3]
Similarly, neuroimaging studies have shown that there is severe diffuse cortical hypometabolism in these patients, and special studies such as PET-PBR28 have revealed neuroinflammation, as well as associated vascular damage.
Currently, research is focusing on neurodegeneration followed by neuroinflammation, which is leading to a higher prevalence of neurodegenerative diseases associated with Long COVID, mainly: Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis and Huntington’s disease. Similarly, cases of neurodegeneration similar to prion diseases and even cases of prion diseases (mainly Creutzfeldt Jakob disease secondary to COVID-19) are beginning to be seen, so the control measures for these chronic and degenerative diseases must be from the acute stages of COVID-19, preventing the inflammation caused by viremia from becoming chronic and affecting the organs, mainly the nervous system, and preventive actions such as vaccination and various anti-inflammatory drugs such as temelimab, baricitinib, as well as antivirals for viral persistence, should also be implemented.[7,8]
Web | DOI | PMC | PDF | Brain Circulation | Commentary | Jan-Mar 2025