The main cognitive assessment where Covid patients showed a deficit was the trail-making test, a connect-the-dots type of exercise involving alternating letters and numbers. Covid patients took longer to complete the task, which might suggest weaknesses in focus, processing speed and other skills.
Dr. Douaud said this diminished ability correlated with loss of gray matter in a specific region of the brain’s cerebellum. But the study doesn’t prove cause and effect, said Dr. Spudich, who also said that the cerebellum, primarily associated with balance, coordination and movement, “is not the first brain structure you think of” to explain changes in ability on the trail-making test.
One significant limitation to the study, Dr. Douaud said, is that researchers did not have information about people’s symptoms, including whether they lost their sense of smell. The researchers also could not identify whether any patients had long Covid, so it’s unclear if the findings relate to that long-term condition.
Differences between infected and uninfected people increased with age. On the trail-making test, for example, performance was similar in both groups for people in their 50s and early 60s, but the gap widened significantly after that. “I don’t know if that’s because younger people recover faster or they were not as affected to start with,” Dr. Douaud said. “Could be either or it could be both.”
Dr. Michael cautioned that the findings could not be extrapolated to the many younger people experiencing post-Covid brain fog and other cognitive issues. And since gray matter and tissue damage were measured at only one time-point after infection, “we don’t know if it’s just a transient change that gets better with recovery,” he said.
Outside experts and the study’s authors said the range of brain areas where Covid patients experience more gray matter loss raised intriguing questions.
“There’s no one part of the brain that does one thing,” Dr. Douaud said. “There are parts of the brain in the infected participants with additional gray matter loss that have nothing to do with the smell, and the ones that are related to smell also are involved in other brain functions.”