Brain cortical changes are related to inflammatory biomarkers in hospitalized SARS-CoV-2 patients with neurological symptoms
Abstract
Increasing evidence shows that the brain is a target of SARS-CoV-2. However, the consequences of the virus on the cortical regions of hospitalized patients are currently unknown. The purpose of this study was to assess brain cortical gray matter volume (GMV), thickness (Th), and surface area (SA) characteristics in SARS-CoV-2 hospitalized patients with a wide range of neurological symptoms and their association with clinical indicators of inflammatory processes. A total of 33 patients were selected from a prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional study during the ongoing pandemic (August 2020-April 2021) at Basel University Hospital. Retrospectively biobank healthy controls with the same image protocol served as controls group. For each anatomical T1w MPRAGE image, the Th and GMV segmentation were performed with the FreeSurfer-5.0. Cortical measures were compared between groups using a linear regression model. The covariates were age, gender, age*gender, MRI magnetic field strength, and total intracranial volume/mean Th/Total SA. The association between cortical features and laboratory variables was assessed using partial correlation adjusting for the same covariates. P-values were adjusted using false discovery rate (FDR). Our findings revealed a lower cortical gray matter volume in orbitofrontal and cingulate regions in patients compared to controls. The orbitofrontal grey matter volume was negatively associated with protein levels, CSF-blood/albumin ratio and CSF EN-RAGE level. CSF EN-RAGE and CSF/Blood-albumin ratio, which are neuroinflammatory biomarkers, were associated with cortical alterations in gray matter volume and thickness in frontal, orbitofrontal, and temporal regions. Our data suggest that viral-triggered inflammation leads to increased neurotoxic damage in some cortical areas.
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