To the Editor: In “Addressing Post-COVID Symptoms: A Guide for Primary Care Physicians”1, the authors present an excellent post-COVID management tool to use as a quick reference and guide for the initial workup and therapeutic support of patients. Indeed, long COVID is a multi-system disease, sometimes occurring after a relatively mild illness. It encompasses distinct clusters of heterogeneous symptoms that can overlap and evolve over time and are sometimes difficult to relate to COVID-19.
Between July 2021 and February 2022, clinical symptoms of 34 cases (mean age 40; 25 women) of long COVID have been met in Family Practice (Belgium) and described in a clinical research report.2 The combination of previously unknown irrepressible fatigue, exhaustion on exertion, brain fog, memory impairment with anomia, sometimes anosmia or other multiple symptoms are characteristic of long COVID. The high number of women in this study sug gests a type of autoimmune disease. All but 2 patients have been vaccinated before becoming ill.
The combination of symptoms in those patients suggested a neuronal impairment. A hypo-metabolism of certain brain areas in some long COVID with a strong neurological component had already been demonstrated.3 Brain single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is cheaper and more accessible in primary care. Brain SPECT has been used to show a disorder of cerebral blood perfusion in Alzheimer disease or stroke and therefore may help in detecting cerebral problem in long COVID.
The fourteen patients for whom a brain SPECT was requested had signs of brain impairment including 3 or more of the following symptoms; unexpected tiredness, effort exhaustion, cognitive problems, brain fog, memory loss, anomia, headache, dysphasia, anosmia, dysgeusia, dysesthesia. Their DUSOI/WONCA severity index was high or maximum and their WONCA COOP charts score was over 20, meaning severe functional loss. Unexpectedly, brain SPECT showed severe alterations in cerebral blood flow in all patients, both cortical and central.
All the lesions observed by brain SPECT are similar to those shown in Figure 1. This supports the hypothesis of a vascular perfusion disorder and localized brain ischemia secondary to a coagulation disorder and/or the presence of auto-antibodies4 and could guide a therapeutic approach. It should be noted that fatigue and exhaustion during exercise can result from a difficult extraction of oxygen from the lungs, probably due also to vascular flow problem.5
Patient MB, F, 48. long COVID since 9 months with brain fog, abnormal dreams, delusion, depressive feeling, irrepressible fatigue, effort exhaustion. The brain SPECT shows an hypofixation of the tracer in left cortico-frontal (a) and left fronto-parietal (b) areas. (Courtesy Drs Bouazza & Mahy, Vesale hospital, ISPPC, Belgium)
In the next step, the patients will benefit of the long COVID program of the COVID Human Genetic Effort (https://www.covidhge.com/), an international consortium aiming to discover the human genetic and immunologic bases of the various clinical forms of SARS-CoV-2 infection and in particular the characteristics of long COVID patient. This will remove the doubt for patients without PCR or with negative PCR for whom the immunologic uncertainty (14/34 cases in this series) can have psychological, medico-legal and clinical consequences.
Vascular encephalopathy has been demonstrated in each patient and supports the hypothesis of a persistent coagulation disorder in long COVID. It is necessary to test the reproducibility of this description, conducted on a small number of patient. Nevertheless family doctors have considerable collective resources in epidemiologic research and must act now.6
Notes
To see this article online, please go to: http://jabfm.org/content/35/4/874.full.
Ethics statement: The patient has expressly agreed in writing to the use of her personal data in an anonymous manner. The ethics committee of the University Hospital of Liege, Belgium, gave its full approval to this study (No. 2022/23).
- Received for publication January 5, 2022.
- Revision received February 21, 2022.
- Accepted for publication February 23, 2022.