An eye to the future: Acute and long-term neuro-ophthalmological and neurological complications of COVID-19

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Abstract

COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the global population and has produced compelling evidence of non-pulmonary organ dysfunction, including the nervous system. It is vital that specialists in ophthalmology and neurology are informed of the potential complications of COVID-19 and gain a deeper understanding of how COVID-19 can cause diseases of the nervous system. In this review we detail four possible mechanisms by which COVID-19 infection may result in neurological or neuro-ophthalmological complications: (1) Toxic and metabolic effects of severe pulmonary COVID-19 disease on the neural axis including hypoxia and the systemic hyper-inflammatory state, (2) endothelial dysfunction, (3) dysimmune responses directed again the neuroaxis, and (4) direct neuro-invasion and injury by the virus itself. We explore the pathological evidence for each of these and how they may link to neuro-ophthalmological disorders. Finally, we explore the evidence for long-term neurological and neuro-ophthalmological complications of COVID-19, with a focus on neurodegeneration.

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APA

Wesselingh, R., & Wesselingh, S. L. (2023, May 1). An eye to the future: Acute and long-term neuro-ophthalmological and neurological complications of COVID-19. Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/ceo.14221

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