UNIVERSITYGEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Infecting the nasal passages of mice with the virus that causes COVID-19 led to a rapid, escalating attack on the brain that triggered severe illness, researchers report.
The attack happened even after the lungs were successfully clearing themselves of the virus.
The findings have implications for understanding the wide range in symptoms and severity of illness among humans who are infected by SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, says lead researcher Mukesh Kumar, an assistant professor at Georgia State University.
“Our thinking that it’s more of a respiratory disease is not necessarily true,” Kumar says. “Once it infects the brain it can affect anything because the brain is controlling your lungs, the heart, everything. The brain is a very sensitive organ. It’s the central processor for everything.”
The study, published in the journal Viruses, assessed virus levels in multiple organs of the infected mice. A control group of mice received a dose of sterile saline solution in their nasal passages.
Kumar says that early in the pandemic, studies involving mice focused on the animals’ lungs and did not assess whether the virus had invaded the brain. Kumar’s team found that virus levels in the lungs of infected mice peaked three days after infection, then began to decline. However, very high levels of infectious virus were found in the brains of all the affected mice on the fifth and sixth days, which is when symptoms of severe disease became obvious, including labored breathing, disorientation, and weakness.
The study found virus levels in the brain were about 1,000 times higher than in other parts of the body.
Kumar says the findings could help explain why some COVID-19 patients seem to be on the road to recovery, with improved lung function, only to rapidly relapse and die. His research and other studies suggest the severity of illness and the types of symptoms that different people experience could depend not only on how much virus a person was exposed to, but how it entered their body.
The nasal passages, he says, provide a more direct path to the brain than the mouth. And while the lungs of mice and humans are designed to fend off infections, the brain is ill equipped to do so, Kumar says. Once viral infections reach the brain, they trigger an inflammatory response that can persist indefinitely, causing ongoing damage.
“The brain is one of the regions where virus likes to hide,” he says, because it cannot mount the kind of immune response that can clear viruses from other parts of the body.
“That’s why we’re seeing severe disease and all these multiple symptoms like heart disease, stroke, and all these long-haulers with loss of smell, loss of taste,” Kumar says. “All of this has to do with the brain rather than with the lungs.”
Kumar says that COVID-19 survivors whose infections reach their brain are also at increased risk of future health problems, including auto-immune diseases, Parkinson’s, multiple sclerosis, and general cognitive decline.
“It’s scary,” Kumar says. “A lot of people think they got COVID and they recovered and now they’re out of the woods. Now I feel like that’s never going to be true. You may never be out of the woods.”
Source: Georgia State University
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