Vascular mechanisms leading to progression of mild cognitive impairment to dementia after COVID-19: Protocol and methodology of a prospective longitudinal observational study

Author:

Owens Cameron D.ORCID,Bonin Pinto CamilaORCID,Mukli Peter,Szarvas Zsofia,Peterfi Anna,Detwiler Sam,Olay Lauren,Olson Ann L.,Li Guangpu,Galvan Veronica,Kirkpatrick Angelia C.,Balasubramanian Priya,Tarantini Stefano,Csiszar Anna,Ungvari Zoltan,Prodan Calin I.,Yabluchanskiy AndriyORCID

Abstract

IntroductionMild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a prodromal stage to dementia, affecting up to 20% of the aging population worldwide. Patients with MCI have an annual conversion rate to dementia of 15–20%. Thus, conditions that increase the conversion from MCI to dementia are of the utmost public health concern. The COVID-19 pandemic poses a significant impact on our aging population with cognitive decline as one of the leading complications following recovery from acute infection. Recent findings suggest that COVID-19 increases the conversion rate from MCI to dementia in older adults. Hence, we aim to uncover a mechanism for COVID-19 induced cognitive impairment and progression to dementia to pave the way for future therapeutic targets that may mitigate COVID-19 induced cognitive decline.MethodologyA prospective longitudinal study is conducted at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. Patients are screened in the Department of Neurology and must have a formal diagnosis of MCI, and MRI imaging prior to study enrollment. Patients who meet the inclusion criteria are enrolled and followed-up at 18-months after their first visit. Visit one and 18-month follow-up will include an integrated and cohesive battery of vascular and cognitive measurements, including peripheral endothelial function (flow-mediated dilation, laser speckle contrast imaging), retinal and cerebrovascular hemodynamics (dynamic vessel retinal analysis, functional near-infrared spectroscopy), and fluid and crystalized intelligence (NIH-Toolbox,n-back). Multiple logistic regression will be used for primary longitudinal data analysis to determine whether COVID-19 related impairment in neurovascular coupling and increases in white matter hyperintensity burden contribute to progression to dementia.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

National Institute on Aging

American Heart Association

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

VA Merit

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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1. Gut Microbiota and Mitochondria: Health and Pathophysiological Aspects of Long COVID;International Journal of Molecular Sciences;2023-12-06

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