CAT scan of a brain with Alzheimer’s disease. (ZEPHYR/Getty Images)

We all know that COVID-19 can lead to lingering fatigue and brain fog. But one of the most rigorous examinations to date of the long-term cognitive impacts of severe infection has just yielded some pretty unsettling results.

In a study comparing 46 severe COVID-19 patients with 460 matched controls, researchers found the mental impacts of severe COVID-19 six months later can be the equivalent to aging 20 years – going from 50 to 70 years old – or losing 10 IQ points.

The specific mental changes were also distinct to those seen in early dementia or general aging.

“Cognitive impairment is common to a wide range of neurological disorders, including dementia, and even routine aging, but the patterns we saw – the cognitive ‘fingerprint’ of COVID-19 – was distinct from all of these,” says neuroscientist David Menon from the University of Cambridge in the UK, who was senior author of the study.

The new paper doesn’t set out to alarm the many of us who’ve already had COVID, but instead investigate more closely how serious the cognitive changes are following severe cases of the infection, so we can begin to understand how to mitigate them. 

“Tens of thousands of people have been through intensive care with COVID-19 in England alone and many more will have been very sick, but not admitted to hospital,” says lead researcher and cognitive scientist Adam Hampshire from Imperial College London.

“This means there are a large number of people out there still experiencing problems with cognition many months later. We urgently need to look at what can be done to help these people.”

The experiment involved 46 people who’d gone to Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge as a result of COVID-19 between March and July 2020. Sixteen of them were put on mechanical ventilation during their stay.

An average of six months after their infection, researchers supervised them using a testing tool called Cognitron to see how they were doing in areas such as memory, attention, reasoning, as well as anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder.

The researchers didn’t have test results from before these individuals fell ill with COVID to compare to. Instead they did the next best thing, and compared their results against a matched control group of 460 people.

These results were then mapped to see how far they deviated from expected scores for their age and demographic, based on 66,008 members of the general public.

The results showed that those who’d survived severe COVID were less accurate and had slower response times than the general public.

The magnitude of cognitive loss was similar to the effects of aging between 50 and 70 years of age – and equivalent to losing 10 IQ points.

Accuracy in verbal analogy tasks – where people are asked to find similarities between words – was most impacted. This mirrors anecdotal reports that suggest people post-infection are struggling to find the right word, and feeling like their brain is in slow motion.

Interestingly, even though patients reported varying levels of fatigue and depression, the severity of the initial infection, rather than the survivor’s current mental health, could best predict the cognitive outcome, the team found.

“These results indicate that although both fatigue and mental health are prominent chronic [consequences] of COVID-19, their severity is likely to be somewhat independent from the observed cognitive deficits,” the researchers write in their paper.

The somewhat good news is that, upon follow up, there were some signs of recovery – but it was gradual at best. 

“We followed some patients up as late as ten months after their acute infection, so were able to see a very slow improvement,” says Menon.

“While this was not statistically significant, it is at least heading in the right direction, but it is very possible that some of these individuals will never fully recover.”

This study only looked at the more extreme end of hospitalized patients, but there are plenty of other studies showing that even ‘mild’ cases can cause similar cognitive impacts.

What’s still not fully understood is why and how the SARS-CoV-2 virus causes this cognitive decline.   

Previous research has shown that during severe COVID, the brain decreases glucose consumption in the frontoparietal network, which is involved in attention, problem solving, and working memory. It’s also known that the virus can directly affect the brain. 

But the researchers suggest the likely culprit isn’t direct infection, but a combination of factors: including reduced oxygen or blood supply to the brain; clotting of vessels; and microscopic bleeds.

There’s also mounting evidence that the body’s own immune and inflammatory response may be having a significant impact on the brain.

“Future work will be focused on mapping these cognitive deficits to underlying neural pathologies and inflammatory biomarkers, and to longitudinally track recovery into the chronic phase,” the researchers write.

Until then, take comfort in the fact that if you’re still feeling slow and foggy months after recovering from COVID-19, you are most certainly not alone.

The research has been published in eClinical Medicine.