Covid Survivors May Suffer Cognitive Complications: Says Study

Researchers say a large proportion of Covid-19 survivors may be affected by neuropsychiatric and cognitive complications, including one of Indian-origin.

A study, published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, found that in the short term, a wide range of neuropsychiatric problems was reported.

The study showed 95 per cent of clinically stable Covid-19 patients had post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other studies found between 17-42 per cent of patients experienced affective disorders, such as depression.

“Understanding the neuropsychiatric and cognitive consequences of Covid-19 is important as millions of people have been affected by the virus, and many cases go undetected,” said researcher Sanjay Kumar from Oxford Brookes University.

“These conditions affect people’s capacity to work effectively, drive, manage finances, make informed decisions and participate in daily family activities,” Kumar added.

The study also revealed that the main short-term cognitive problems were found to be impaired attention (reported by 45 per cent of patients) and impaired memory (between 13-28 per cent of patients).

In the long term, neuropsychiatric problems were mostly affective disorders and fatigue, as well as impaired attention (reported by 44 per cent of patients) and memory (reported between 28-50 per cent of patients).

More than 200 patients with mild to severe Covid-19 infection were involved in the research.

“Detailed cognitive evaluation and robust monitoring of patients should be considered in order to detect new neurological cases,” Kumar noted.

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