Representational Image
Blood clots in the brain or the lungs might explain some
common symptoms of "long Covid", including brain fog and fatigue, a
UK study suggests.
In the study, of 1,837 people admitted to hospital because
of Covid, researchers say two blood proteins point to clots being one cause,
reports BBC.
It is thought 16 per cent of such patients have trouble
thinking, concentrating or remembering for at least six months.
Long Covid can also develop after milder infections. But the
research team, from the universities of Oxford and Leicester, stress:
Identifying predictors and possible mechanisms was "a
key step" in understanding post-Covid brain fog, study author Prof Paul
Harrison, from the University of Oxford, said.
But there may still be many different causes of long Covid.
Leicester's professor of respiratory medicine, Chris
Brightling, said: "It's a combination of someone's health before, the
acute event itself and what happens afterwards that lead on to physical and
mental health consequences."
University lecturer Dr Simon Retford, from Lancashire, spent
two weeks in a coma after catching Covid in October 2020, with his family told
to expect the worst.
Now, he is 60-70 per cent back to where he was before but still has
problems concentrating and with short-term memory loss and losing his train of
thought.
"I took on a course-leader role last May and I was like
a really slow computer which struggled to get going," he says.
Dr Retford used to work for the police but would be unable
to do so now.
"If I overdo it now, I feel so fatigued," he says.
But although he may never completely recover, Dr Retford is
determined to remain positive.
"I'm still here and thousands aren't," he says.
The Post-hospitalisation Covid-19 study (PHosp-Covid), in
Nature Medicine, blames higher levels of the protein fibrinogen and protein
fragment D-dimer for brain fog.
Study author Dr Max Taquet, from Oxford, said: "Both
fibrinogen and D-dimer are involved in blood clotting and so the results
support the hypothesis that blood clots are a cause of post-Covid cognitive
problems.
"Fibrinogen may be directly acting on the brain and its
blood vessels, whereas D-dimer often reflects blood clots in the lungs and the
problems in the brain might be due to lack of oxygen."
Those with high D-dimer levels also:
A US study found similar results.
/KN/
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