Disentangling the cognitive, physical, and mental health sequelae of COVID-19

As COVID-19 cases exceed hundreds of millions globally, many survivors face cognitive challenges and prolonged symptoms. However, important questions about the cognitive effects of COVID-19 remain unresolved. In this cross-sectional online study, 478 adult volunteers who self-reported a positive tes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell reports. Medicine 2022-10, Vol.3 (10), p.100750-100750, Article 100750
Hauptverfasser: Wild, Conor J., Norton, Loretta, Menon, David K., Ripsman, David A., Swartz, Richard H., Owen, Adrian M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As COVID-19 cases exceed hundreds of millions globally, many survivors face cognitive challenges and prolonged symptoms. However, important questions about the cognitive effects of COVID-19 remain unresolved. In this cross-sectional online study, 478 adult volunteers who self-reported a positive test for COVID-19 (mean = 30 days since most recent test) perform significantly worse than pre-pandemic norms on cognitive measures of processing speed, reasoning, verbal, and overall performance, but not short-term memory, suggesting domain-specific deficits. Cognitive differences are even observed in participants who did not require hospitalization. Factor analysis of health- and COVID-related questionnaires reveals two clusters of symptoms—one that varies mostly with physical symptoms and illness severity, and one with mental health. Cognitive performance is positively correlated with the global measure encompassing physical symptoms, but not the one that broadly describes mental health, suggesting that the subjective experience of “long COVID” relates to physical symptoms and cognitive deficits, especially executive dysfunction. In 478 survivors of COVID-19 tested approximately 30 days after infection, Wild et al. show that cognition is affected in specific domains. Cognitive performance is positively correlated with physical but not mental health, suggesting that the subjective experience of “long COVID” consists of physical and cognitive, especially executive, symptoms.
ISSN:2666-3791
2666-3791
DOI:10.1016/j.xcrm.2022.100750