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COVID-19 Linked to Alzheimer’s Like Dementia

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Multiple reports support the long-lasting impact of COVID-19 on brain functions. This data may help in developing risk management and therapeutic strategies for COVID-19-associated cognitive impairment.

‘Artificial intelligence uncovers a mechanism that associates COVID-19 with Alzheimer’s disease. The SARS-CoV-2 virus may impact several genes or pathways involved in neuroinflammation and brain microvascular injury thereby causing cognitive impairment. The data may help in developing risk management and therapeutic strategies for COVID-19-associated dementia.’


The study team harnessed the essence of artificial intelligence using existing datasets of patients with Alzheimer’s and COVID-19. The proximity between SARS-CoV-2 host genes/proteins and those associated with several neurological diseases along with the genetic factors were then measured.

COVID-19 and Alzheimer’s disease

It was discovered that close network relationships between the virus and genes/proteins associated with several neurological diseases, most notably Alzheimer’s, pointed to the pathways by which COVID-19 could lead to Alzheimer’s disease-like dementia.

To explore this further, the team investigated COVID-19 correlation with neuroinflammation and brain microvascular injury (both hallmarks of Alzheimer’s).

“We discovered that SARS-CoV-2 infection significantly altered Alzheimer’s markers implicated in brain inflammation and that certain viral entry factors are highly expressed in cells in the blood-brain barrier. These findings indicate that the virus may impact several genes or pathways involved in neuroinflammation and brain microvascular injury, which could lead to Alzehimer’s disease-like cognitive impairment,” says Feixiong Cheng, Ph.D., assistant staff in Cleveland Clinic’s Genomic Medicine Institute and lead author on the study.

The study also found that individuals with the allele APOE E4/E4, the greatest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s, had decreased expression of antiviral defense genes, which could make these patients more susceptible to COVID-19.

“Ultimately, we hope to have paved the way for research that leads to testable and measurable biomarkers that can identify patients at the highest risk for neurological complications with COVID-19,” says Dr. Cheng.

Source: Medindia

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