4.7 Article

Larger gray matter volumes in neuropsychiatric long-COVID syndrome

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 317, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2022.114836

Keywords

COVID-19; Long-COVID; Neuroimaging; VBM

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Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common in long-COVID patients, and this study found significantly enlarged gray matter volume (GMV) in several brain regions of long-COVID patients compared to healthy controls. The GMV changes were associated with the time since onset of COVID-19, but not with the clinical symptom burden. Larger sample sizes and longitudinal studies are needed to better understand the mediating mechanisms between COVID-19, GMV, and neuropsychiatric symptoms.
Neuropsychiatric symptoms are the most common sequelae of long-COVID. As accumulating evidence suggests an impact of survived SARS-CoV-2-infection on brain physiology, it is necessary to further investigate brain structural changes in relation to course and neuropsychiatric symptom burden in long-COVID. To this end, the present study investigated 3T-MRI scans from long-COVID patients suffering from neuro-psychiatric symptoms (n = 30), and healthy controls (n = 20). Whole-brain comparison of gray matter volume (GMV) was conducted by voxel-based morphometry. To determine whether changes in GMV are predicted by neuropsychiatric symptom burden and/or initial severity of symptoms of COVID-19 and time since onset of COVID-19 stepwise linear regression analysis was performed. Significantly enlarged GMV in long-COVID patients was present in several clusters (spanning fronto-temporal areas, insula, hippocampus, amygdala, basal ganglia, and thalamus in both hemispheres) when compared to controls. Time since onset of COVID-19 was a significant regressor in four of these clusters with an inverse relationship. No associations with clinical symptom burden were found. GMV alterations in limbic and secondary olfactory areas are present in long-COVID patients and might be dynamic over time. Larger samples and longitudinal data in long-COVID patients are required to further clarify the mediating mechanisms between COVID-19, GMV and neuropsychiatric symptoms.

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