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Published in: Neurological Sciences 2/2022

01-02-2022 | SARS-CoV-2 | COVID-19

Episodic long-term memory in post-infectious SARS-CoV-2 patients

Authors: Edoardo Nicolò Aiello, Elena Fiabane, Marina Rita Manera, Alice Radici, Federica Grossi, Marcella Ottonello, Claudio Vassallo, Debora Pain, Caterina Pistarini

Published in: Neurological Sciences | Issue 2/2022

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Abstract

Background

Episodic long-term memory (LTM) difficulties/deficits are frequent in COVID-19-recovered patients and negatively impact on prognosis and outcome. However, little is known about their semiology and prevalence, also being still debated whether they arise from primary amnesic features or are secondary to dysexecutive/inattentive processes and disease-related/premorbid status. Hence, this study aimed at (1) assessing LTM functioning in post-infectious SARS-CoV-2 patients by accounting for premorbid and disease-related confounders and (2) exploring its cognitive etiology.

Methods

Measures of global cognition (Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)) and LTM (Babcock Memory Test (BMT)) of fifty-four COVID-19-recovered patients were retrospectively collected. Patients were subdivided into those being already at risk or not for cognitive decline (RCD + ; RCD −). Cognitive measures were converted into equivalent scores (ESs).

Results

LTM sub-clinical/clinical deficits (ESs = 0/1) were mildly-to-moderately prevalent in both RCD + (MoCA-Memory, 31.8%; BMT, 31.8%) and RCD − (MoCA-Memory, 28.6%; BMT, 39.3%) patients. MMSE and MoCA total scores, but not the MoCA-Attention subtest, were associated with the BMT. RCD + asymptomatic patients performed better on the BMT (p = .033) than those requiring O2 therapy (but not ventilation).

Discussion

COVID-19-recovered individuals might show LTM deficits of both primary and secondary etiology and should be thus screened for them, especially those having suffered mid-to-moderate COVID-19 and those already being at risk for cognitive decline. Both I- and II-level measures of verbal LTM can be adopted, although the former might be more sensitive.
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Metadata
Title
Episodic long-term memory in post-infectious SARS-CoV-2 patients
Authors
Edoardo Nicolò Aiello
Elena Fiabane
Marina Rita Manera
Alice Radici
Federica Grossi
Marcella Ottonello
Claudio Vassallo
Debora Pain
Caterina Pistarini
Publication date
01-02-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Neurological Sciences / Issue 2/2022
Print ISSN: 1590-1874
Electronic ISSN: 1590-3478
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10072-021-05752-8

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