Apr 23, 2020
Accumulating clinical evidence suggests that many patients with COVID have neurological symptoms and that some may even present with neurologic manifestations of the disease. Most COVID patients have a cough, respiratory distress, and while clinicians often speak about how similar the presentations of patients with respiratory COVID are, it’s worth looking at the possibility that COVID has atypical presentations, too.There’s very good evidence that coronaviruses can infect all sorts of human cells--not just those in the respiratory tract. A few weeks ago we discussed ACE inhibitors and NSAIDs and SARS COV2 and you may remember that the virus attaches to the ACE2 receptor--a receptor which is found on a wide range of human cells. What are the chances the virus can infect a patients brain cells, cranial nerves, peripheral nerves?
Host: Elizabeth Esty, MD
Research By: Tanisha Crosby-Attipoe & Mason Tuttle
Sound Editing By: Stephen Bahmani
Time Stamps:
0:23 - Numbers
1:25 - Possible Neurological Manifestations of COVID
4:15 - What are the chances the virus can infect a patients brain cells, cranial nerves, peripheral nerves?
4:55 - The neuroinvasive potential of SARS‐CoV2 may play a role in the respiratory failure of COVID‐19 patients
8:24 - early neurological research from NEJM in February
9:10 - some early research indicated possible neurological manifestations
10:05 - COVID and serious CV incidents
10:40 - Italian Neurologists urge other nations to be alert for neuro presentations of COVID
11:11 - Case report in Radiology, COVID patient with encephalopathy
12:06 - Possible link with Guillain-Barré
References:
Further reading and listening:
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/928069
http://emguidewire.libsyn.com/rss