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Emergence of Covid-19 virus is associated with high frequency of extremely severe clinical pictures, with minor signs of CNS impairment (e.g. anosmia, headache). Since neurotropism is a common feature of coronavirus infection in animals, the investigators examine if indirect signs of CNS lesion are observed in association with severe Covid-19 infection.
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In animals, coronavirus infection is commonly associated with CNS involvement:
epilepsy and ataxia are observed during Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) and virus is recovered in CSF, CNS is involved with strain-dependent severity in mice and rats infected by murine hepatitis virus, and murine infection with MHV A59 strain is a model of multiple sclerosis (MS). Mice encephalitis occurs through infection of olfactory bulb and spreads along the axonal pathway. Viral antigens and neuronal apoptosis are observed in brainstem and hypothalamus, without minimal or absent inflammation.
Most COVID-19 patients with neurologic impairment displayed expected complications of severe infections (e.g. neuropathy and muscle loss, stroke) but encephalitis remained exceptional, as previously observed in SRAS. It is argued that central lesions may explain some of the clinical features ventilation failure, or disproportionate residual fatigue and cognition impairment in survivors of severe COVID infection. According to data obtained from various coronavirus infections in animals, the investigators ask if severe COVID infection in human could be associated with sub-clinical encephalitis. This clinical trial examines highly sensitive blood biomarkers of brain dysfunction in correlation with late clinical outcome. Biomarkers are neurofilament light chain (NFL) and GFAP. Clinical outcomes are death, signs of central neurologic sequellae, and fatigue. Clinical examination and blood samples will be obtained at inclusion (d0), which is mostly the entrance in intensive care unit (ICU), at day 7 (between day 4 and exit from ICU) and at day 60.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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