No serological evidence for neuronal damage or reactive gliosis in neuro-COVID-19 patients with long-term persistent headache

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Abstract

Recent studies have indicated that long-term neurological sequelae after COVID-19 are not accompanied by an increase of canonical biomarkers of central nervous system injury in blood, but subgroup stratifications are lacking. This is a particular concern in chronic headache, which can be a leading symptom of Post-COVID diseases associated with neuronal damage such as vasculitis or autoimmune encephalitis. We here compared patients with mild Post-COVID-19 syndrome and persistent headache (persistent Post-COVID-19 headache) lasting longer than 12 weeks after the initial serological diagnosis, to patients with mild and severe COVID-19 and COVID-19-negative controls. Levels of neurofilament light chain and glial fibrillary astrocytic protein, i.e. markers of neuronal damage and reactive astrogliosis, were lower in blood from patients with persistent Post-COVID-19 headache compared to patients with severe COVID-19. Hence, our pilot serological study indicates that long-term Post-COVID-19 headache may not be a sign of underlying neuronal damage or neuroinflammation.

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de Boni, L., Odainic, A., Gancarczyk, N., Kaluza, L., Strassburg, C. P., Kersting, X. A. K., … Petzold, G. C. (2022, December 1). No serological evidence for neuronal damage or reactive gliosis in neuro-COVID-19 patients with long-term persistent headache. Neurological Research and Practice. BioMed Central Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1186/s42466-022-00217-5

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