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dgurdasani1's profile
Deepti Gurdasani
Deepti Gurdasani
Deepti Gurdasani
@dgurdasani1

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Deepti Gurdasani

@dgurdasani1

Senior Lecturer @QMUL Epidemiology, statistical genetics, machine learning. Intersectional feminist. Advocating for a better culture in academia. All views mine

Joined October 2017

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    Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

    More & more evidence accruing that SARS-CoV-2 causes significant persistent effects on the brain. We now have multiple strands supporting this- -long-term symptoms-brain fog, memory loss -higher risk of stroke/neuro diseases -structural brain changes -virus persistence in brain🧵

    2:32 PM - 20 Jun 2021
    • 4,545 Retweets
    • 8,417 Likes
    • tom106 teittta Alex May Dominique moa Red Hed Riddhima Kedia kat Ian Ballantine-Gray, Virescit Vulnere Virtus
    208 replies 4,545 retweets 8,417 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        We know that SARS-CoV-2 is neuro-invasive. This means that it enters the brain- we think this is through the olfactory nerve (the nerve that helps us smell) through the nose. This has been shown in mice, hamsters and directly in humans in autopsies. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-020-00758-5 …pic.twitter.com/kB76MsfWlH

        7 replies 395 retweets 1,276 likes
        Show this thread
      3. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Replicating SARS-CoV-2 has also been shown to persist in neuro-epithelium (olfactory nerves in the nose) for up to 6 months among people who have recurrent or persistent loss of smell.https://stm.sciencemag.org/content/13/596/eabf8396 …

        8 replies 246 retweets 971 likes
        Show this thread
      4. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Neurological symptoms are significant among people post-COVID, & they persist for long periods of time, even after other symptoms recover. ONS data shows that problems with concentration, memory, brain fog, loss of smell/taste are common persistent symptoms after infectionpic.twitter.com/1BmDVctsdo

        11 replies 349 retweets 1,152 likes
        Show this thread
      5. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Symptom based surveys have consistently shown that neurological symptoms are more likely to arise later, and persist over time, and symptom clusters that have neurological symptoms generally also correlate with poorer day to day functioning.pic.twitter.com/Oyj7GbcWLE

        3 replies 216 retweets 872 likes
        Show this thread
      6. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Deepti Gurdasani Retweeted Deepti Gurdasani

        A @TheLancetPsych study showed that neurological & psychiatric diagnosis were very common at 6 months after COVID-19, and the risk for psychiatric disorders, strokes, dementia, muscle disorders was significantly higher, even in those not hospitalised.https://twitter.com/dgurdasani1/status/1379721348285673472?s=20 …

        Deepti Gurdasani added,

        Deepti Gurdasani @dgurdasani1
        Important study out from @TheLancetPsych on neurological & psychiatric manifestations across 236,379 people with 6 months follow up after COVID-19 in the US- examined using electronic health records. What did it find? https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpsy/article/PIIS2215-0366(21)00084-5/fulltext?utm_campaign=lancetcovid21&utm_content=160982275&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&hss_channel=tw-27013292 …
        Show this thread
        4 replies 312 retweets 955 likes
        Show this thread
      7. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        There have been earlier studies that have looked at cognitive decline following hospitalisation with COVID-19 suggesting significant reduction after hospitalisation. These studies have been limited by not having measurements pre-COVID-19 to establish that this was the cause.

        2 replies 118 retweets 700 likes
        Show this thread
      8. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        This is addressed now in a study within UK biobank. This is a cohort of generally healthy people who have had many measurements done as part of the study. ~40,000 people have had brain imaging done for research purposes before the COVID-19 pandemic.

        2 replies 128 retweets 753 likes
        Show this thread
      9. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Of the people who have had their second MRI brain scan in the Biobank study, some of them developed COVID-19 before the second scan. We can compare brain changes between those infected vs not infected by comparing the change in brain structure between the two scans.

        3 replies 128 retweets 756 likes
        Show this thread
      10. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        394 people who were COVID-19 positive (only 15 of these were hospitalised) were imaged after COVID-19 was diagnosed. These were compared with 388 controls (not diagnosed with COVID-19). Both groups had MRI scans done before the pandemic at baseline.

        1 reply 114 retweets 677 likes
        Show this thread
      11. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        They were compared for volume and thickness in certain areas of the brain. Cases & controls were matched for age, sex, ethnicity & the time between the baseline and repeat MRI scan to ensure any difference in change in brain structure between the two groups was not down to these.

        1 reply 90 retweets 627 likes
        Show this thread
      12. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        The groups were well matched. Age was between 47-80 (mean age ~59). Similar blood pressure, prevalence of diabetes and BMI. As mentioned, most of the COVID group was people who were infected & tested in the community with non-severe COVID-19.pic.twitter.com/wVFHdTGSBV

        2 replies 99 retweets 619 likes
        Show this thread
      13. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Most of the patients had been diagnosed Oct 2020 or after, and the duration between infection and scan varied accordingly. Mean duration was 4.5 months post COVID-19pic.twitter.com/dGd88jZffg

        2 replies 93 retweets 580 likes
        Show this thread
      14. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        The study found significant reduction in grey matter in certain parts of the brain- especially those associated with smell, and memory. Of note- these are changes in a population of people who mostly had mild COVID symptoms - *greater* reduction from baseline in those with COVIDpic.twitter.com/xTnfiAM2Sc

        11 replies 266 retweets 875 likes
        Show this thread
      15. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        While correlation isn't causation, the fact that these people were imaged at baseline before COVID-19 - allowing to compare to a group not infected with COVID-19 to look at difference in decline in grey matter after COVID compared to those who weren't infected makes it strong.

        3 replies 121 retweets 727 likes
        Show this thread
      16. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Remember, these groups were also the same age, had the same interval between scans, and many similar characteristics, making it unlikely this decline is down to something other than COVID-19

        2 replies 104 retweets 657 likes
        Show this thread
      17. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        This is very concerning- we are seeing evidence of significant changes in the brain even among people with relatively mild COVID-19. This study was in 46-80 yr olds, and many would've been healthy. We urgently need to understand the impact of COVID-19 in younger age groups too.

        15 replies 351 retweets 1,108 likes
        Show this thread
      18. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        This isn't just one study that suggests a link between SARS-CoV-2 and neurodegenerative disease. There have been several care reports of early-onset parkinsonism after SARS-CoV-2 infection, highlighting possible links with neuro-degenerative disease.https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laneur/article/PIIS1474-4422(20)30442-7/fulltext …

        6 replies 244 retweets 814 likes
        Show this thread
      19. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Does this happen with other viruses? Yes, many viruses invade and affect the brain: herpes viruses, Zika virus, measles, polio and of course, Spanish flu (encephalitis lethargica as immortalised in Awakenings). Other coronaviruses are known to invade the brain too.

        8 replies 174 retweets 813 likes
        Show this thread
      20. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        This has been concerning for a while, but recent reports show us ignoring this will come at a huge cost. We need to stop focusing on hospitalisations & deaths as the only outcome, thinking that it's ok for transmission to continue at such levels. It's not.

        4 replies 463 retweets 1,598 likes
        Show this thread
      21. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        This is the sort of thinking that will possibly leave thousands with chronic debilitating neurological illness, as well as other impacts of long COVID. By the time our scientific community & govt are satisfied that there is irrevocable evidence, it'll be much too late.

        9 replies 288 retweets 1,195 likes
        Show this thread
      22. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        While I'm not a neuroscientist, I've worked with @HZiauddeen , who is, to make sure my interpretation of the UK biobank study is correct. I've seen several non-experts comment on possible limitations of the study, so wanted to ensure that I'd sought an expert perspective.

        4 replies 103 retweets 809 likes
        Show this thread
      23. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Conclusion: This is a robust study that shows significant change in brain structure, and thinning of grey matter in memory, smell and taste associated brain regions post-COVID-19. We should be concerned. This is not a virus we should be happy to expose anyone to.

        41 replies 866 retweets 2,315 likes
        Show this thread
      24. Deepti Gurdasani‏ @dgurdasani1 Jun 20

        Link to UK Biobank study here: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.06.11.21258690v1.full.pdf …

        35 replies 129 retweets 667 likes
        Show this thread
      25. End of conversation

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