• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Feeling Forgetful After COVID? Study Shows The Virus Can Affect Short-Term Memory

December 7, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

The ConversationAlthough it’s well known that COVID affects the respiratory system, it’s perhaps less well known that the virus can also affect cognitive function.

Many people with COVID experience a phenomenon commonly called “brain fog”, which can include problems remembering, concentrating and performing daily tasks. Brain fog can also be a symptom of long COVID, where people suffer ongoing COVID symptoms for months, or even years, after infection.

Advertisement

In a recent study, we found that COVID negatively impacts working memory function, but only in adults aged 25 and over. Our results suggest that memory function can recover over time after a COVID infection, but people with ongoing symptoms may continue to have difficulty with their working memory.

Working memory, a form of short-term memory, allows us to store and retrieve information while performing tasks such as problem solving, reading or having a conversation. So impaired working memory function can have a significant impact on a person’s daily life.

While previous studies have demonstrated a relationship between COVID and cognitive function, they’ve typically involved lengthy surveys with multiple tasks, and often focused only on those most severely affected by a COVID infection.

Advertisement

We wanted to develop something simpler which would engage as wide an audience as possible and allow us to rapidly assess the impact of COVID on working memory function specifically. So we designed an anonymous online survey and memory quiz with elements of gamification that could be completed quickly via a variety of platforms including smartphones, tablets and PCs.

The survey included questions about participants’ COVID status and any ongoing symptoms, if applicable. They were also asked to rate any cognitive problems they had, for example with their ability to remember things or concentrate on tasks. The quiz was a visual working memory game where participants had to remember and recall pictures of fruits, animals, numbers or objects.

As our survey and memory quiz can be completed quickly, they could potentially also be used as an assessment tool in patients who have limited attention spans or those with other conditions affecting memory, such as dementia.

COVID brain fog

COVID sometimes leads to brain fog, which can include problems with memory. Image credit: Justlight/Shutterstock.com

Memory recovery

More than 5,400 people took part in our study between December 2020 and July 2021. We had participants across a range of age groups, from 18-24 to 85 plus. Some 31.4% of participants had had COVID, while 68.6% had not.

Memory scores for the COVID group were significantly lower compared to the non-COVID group in every age category except the youngest group, 18- to 24-year-olds. We observed a positive correlation between the number of months since having had COVID (less than one to 17) and memory scores. This suggests that memory function can recover over time after a COVID infection.

The difference with long COVID

Roughly 50% of the COVID group reported having ongoing COVID symptoms, and these participants were more likely to have lower memory scores, compared with those who had COVID but didn’t have ongoing symptoms.

Advertisement

Although we don’t know which COVID variants participants in our research were infected with, we conducted the study at a time when alpha and delta were the prominent variants in circulation, before omicron emerged. We need more research to determine the impact of omicron variants on working memory function, as well as whether vaccinations might play a protective role.

Our study also cannot reveal what it is about a COVID infection that causes memory deficits and brain fog. Future studies will focus on measuring brain activity in people with and without long COVID while they’re performing working memory tasks, using techniques such as electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging. This approach will hopefully provide us with new insights on how COVID affects the brain in those with long COVID.

Our finding that working memory appears to improve over time can hopefully provide some reassurance. But since working memory function can continue to be impaired in those with ongoing COVID symptoms, we would suggest that a holistic approach to treating long COVID patients should include some focus on memory.The Conversation

Advertisement

Aziz Asghar, Senior Lecturer in Neuroscience, Hull York Medical School, University of Hull; Abayomi Salawu, Consultant in Rehabilitation Medicine at the Hull University Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, University of Hull, and Heidi Baseler, Senior Lecturer in Imaging Sciences, Hull York Medical School, University of York

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Sustainable jet fuel company Alder Fuels seals investments from United, Honeywell
  2. Libyan interim PM discusses border closure with Tunisian president
  3. Global Founders Capital leads $9.3M investment into Awning, a real estate brokerage for individual investors
  4. Tiger Global backs Favo, which is building an easier way for Latin Americans to order groceries online

Source Link: Feeling Forgetful After COVID? Study Shows The Virus Can Affect Short-Term Memory

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • First Ever Visible Green Aurorae Seen On Mars
  • New Species Of “Heavenly” Tiny Metallic Poison Dart Frog Discovered In The Amazon
  • Homo Naledi Had Hands That Rock Climbers Would Be Jealous Of
  • Blackouts Around The World As X Class Solar Flare Hits Earth
  • Chimps Use Healing Plants To Treat Each Other’s Wounds And Clean Up After Sex
  • 356-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trackway With Claw Marks Is Probably Oldest Evidence Of Reptiles
  • Vegetarians Feel As Disgusted About Eating Meat As Omnivores Do About Cannibalism
  • Noah’s Ark Or Just A Big Mound? US Researchers Eye Up A Strange Ship-Shaped Ridge In Turkey
  • US Congressman Films Old Secret Passageway Beneath The Lincoln Room Of The Capitol Building
  • Got Stains On Your Clothes? Know When To Use Hot Or Cold Water
  • Why Do Your Towels Dry You Better When They’re Older?
  • “She Would See That Face Morph Into The Face Of A Dragon”: Strange Tales From Neuroscience At CURIOUS Live
  • A Giant Mountain Range Has Been Hidden Under Antarctica’s Ice For Millions Of Years
  • Why Did Ancient Silver Coins Have Owls On Them?
  • Ancient Humans May Have Survived In Isolated Northern Scotland During Extreme Cooling 12,000 Years Ago
  • In The Year 536 CE, A Truly Miserable Period Of Human History Began
  • Why Is The Uncanny Valley So Frightening? And What One Frowny Robot Is Doing To Overcome It
  • 5-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Contains Sample Of Air From The Pliocene Epoch
  • Flamingos Make Tiny Tornadoes In Water To Trap Their Prey
  • Off The Coast Of California Strange And Regular Circular Structures Line The Ocean Floor
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version