Background and purpose: COVID-19-related acute neurological phenotypes are being increasingly recognised, with neurological complications reported in more than 30% of hospitalised patients. However, multicentric studies providing a population-based perspective are lacking.
Methods:We conducted a retrospective multicentric study at five hospitals in Northern Portugal, representing 45.1% of all hospitalised patients in this region, between 1 March and 30 June 2020.Results: Among 1261 hospitalised COVID-19 patients, 457 (36.2%) presented neurological manifestations, corresponding to a rate of 357 per 1000 in the North Region. Patients with neurologic manifestations were younger (68.0 vs. 71.2 years, p = 0.002), and the most frequent neurological symptoms were headache (13.4%), delirium (10.1%), and impairment of consciousness (9.7%). Acute well-defined central nervous system (CNS) involvement was found in 19.1% of patients, corresponding to a rate of 217 per 1000 hospitalised patients in the whole region. Assuming that all patients with severe neurological events were hospitalised, we extrapolated our results to all COVID-19 patients in the region, estimating that 116 will have a severe neurological event, corresponding to a rate of nine per 1000 (95% CI = 7-11). Overall case fatality in patients presenting neurological manifestations was 19.8%, increasing to 32.6% among those with acute well-defined CNS involvement.
Conclusions:We characterised the population of hospitalised COVID-19 patients in Northern Portugal and found that neurological symptoms are common and associated with a high degree of disability at discharge. CNS involvement with criteria for in-hospital admission was observed in a significant proportion of patients. This knowledge provides the tools for adequate health planning and for improving COVID-19 multidisciplinary patient care.
MORC2 gene encodes a ubiquitously expressed nuclear protein
involved in chromatin remodeling, DNA repair, and transcriptional
regulation. Heterozygous mutations in MORC2 gene have been
associated with a spectrum of disorders affecting the peripheral nervous
system such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT2Z), spinal muscular atrophy-like
(SMA-like) with or without cerebellar involvement, and a developmental
syndrome associated with impaired growth, craniofacial dysmorphism and
axonal neuropathy (DIGFAN syndrome). Such variability in clinical
manifestations associated with the increasing number of variants of
unknown significance detected by next-generation sequencing constitutes
a serious diagnostic challenge. Here we report the characterization of
an in vitro model to evaluate the pathogenicity of variants of
unknown significance based on MORC2 overexpression in a
neuroblastoma cell line SH-EP or in cortical neurons. Likewise, we show
that MORC2 mutants affect survival and trigger apoptosis over
time in SH-EP cell line. Furthermore, overexpression in primary cortical
neurons increases apoptotic cell death and decreases neurite outgrowth.
Altogether, these approaches establish the pathogenicity of two new
variants p.G444R and p.H446Q in three patients from two families. These
new mutations in MORC2 gene are associated with autosomal
dominant CMT and with adult late onset SMA-like phenotype, further
increasing the spectrum of clinical manifestations associated with
MORC2 mutations.
MORC2 gene encodes a ubiquitously expressed nuclear protein involved in chromatin remodeling, DNA repair, and transcriptional regulation. Heterozygous mutations in MORC2 gene have been associated with a spectrum of disorders affecting the peripheral nervous system such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT2Z),
moderate to severe pneumonia received anticoagulation, in spite of it , some developed stroke and treating intracerebral bleed cases was quite challenging . Further studies with larger number of patients and with control groups should be done to understand the interplay between COVID-19 and mucormycosis and resulting neurological syndromes.
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