Study shows COVID virus lurks in skull, brain meninges after infection

By Anjali Sharma

NEW YORK -According to a major German study on Tuesday SARS-CoV-2, remains in the skull and meninges for years after infection, leading to a long-lasting effect on the brain.

Researchers from Helmholtz Munich and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat found that SARS-CoV-2 spike protein remains in the brain’s protective layers the meninges, and the skull’s bone marrow for up to four years after infection.

The team found that these spike proteins are responsible for triggering chronic inflammation in affected individuals and increase the risk of neurodegenerative diseases.

Prof. Ali Ertürk, Director at the Institute for Intelligent Biotechnologies at Helmholtz Munich said that the long-term neurological effects include “accelerated brain ageing, potentially leading to a loss of five to 10 years of healthy brain function in affected individuals.”

The study published in the journal Cell Host & Microbe, may have neurological symptoms of long Covid such as headaches, sleep disturbances, and “brain fog,” or cognitive impairment.

It noted that 5 to 10 per cent of people infected with Covid are likely to experience long Covid 400 million individuals may carry a significant amount of the spike protein.

The vaccines against the deadly virus significantly reduce the accumulation of the spike protein in the brain, said the researchers.

The reduction was “only around 50 per cent in mice, leaving residual spike protein that continues to pose a toxic risk to the brain”.

The team developed a novel AI-powered imaging technique to understand how the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein affects the brain.

The method offers a three-dimensional visualization of viral proteins, was deployed to find undetectable distributions of spike protein in tissue samples from Covid-19 patients and mice.

The findings revealed significantly elevated concentrations of spike protein in the skull’s bone marrow and meninges, even years after infection.

The spike protein binds to so-called ACE2 receptors, abundant in these regions, it concluded.

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