AI Article Synopsis

  • Cerebral microhaemorrhages are becoming recognized as a complication in COVID-19 patients, with a study aiming to explore their patterns and relate them to other diseases.
  • The study involved analyzing MRI results from COVID-19 patients with microhaemorrhages, looking at their distribution and patient's clinical characteristics.
  • Results showed that these microhaemorrhages were commonly found in brain areas associated with critical illness, raising questions about their origin linked to either SARS-CoV-2 infection or effects from severe hypoxia and mechanical ventilation.

Article Abstract

Background: Cerebral microhaemorrhages are increasingly being recognised as a complication of COVID-19. This observational retrospective study aims to further investigate the potential pathophysiology through assessing the pattern of microhaemorrhage and clinical characteristics of patients with COVID-19 and microhaemorrhage. By comparing with similar patterns of microhaemorrhage in other non-COVID-19 disease, this study aims to propose possible common pathogenic mechanisms.

Methods: A retrospective observational case series was performed identifying all patients with COVID-19 complicated by cerebral microhaemorrhage on MRI. The distribution and number of microhaemorrhages were recorded using the microbleed anatomical scale, and patients' baseline characteristics and salient test results were also recorded.

Results: Cerebral microhaemorrhages were noted to have a predilection for the corpus callosum, the juxtacortical white matter and brainstem. All patients had a preceding period of critical illness with respiratory failure and severe hypoxia necessitating intubation and mechanical ventilation.

Discussion: This study demonstrates a pattern of cerebral microhaemorrhage that is similar to the pattern reported in patients with non-COVID-19 related critical illness and other causes of severe hypoxia. This raises questions regarding whether microhaemorrhage occurs from endothelial dysfunction due the direct effect of SARS-CoV-2 infection or from the secondary effects of critical illness and hypoxia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7681795PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/svn-2020-000652DOI Listing

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