Thursday, July 2, 2020

Strokes, delirium and dizziness: Here's what we know about how the coronavirus can affect the brain

When news of a respiratory illness spreading through China first broke, Dr. S. Andrew Josephson — chair of neurology at the University of California, San Francisco — didn’t anticipate that his department would be involved. “When I first heard about it ... I said, ‘This isn’t going to involve my day job,’” Josephson, who is also the editor in chief of JAMA Neurology, tells Yahoo Life.
But within a few weeks of COVID-19 arriving in the United States, patients began showing neurological symptoms, and Josephson realized he was wrong. “It turns out, I care for these patients every day,” he says.
A new study from the <em>Lancet</em> is providing further evidence that the coronavirus is associated with neurological symptoms. An expert from the frontlines weighs in on what we know thus far. (Getty Images)
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Josephson is one of many studying how the coronavirus affects the brain and why it has been found to cause a variety of neurological symptoms, from stroke to memory loss. He authored an editorial on one of the earliest studies published by JAMA Neurologyin April, in which researchers from Wuhan, China, identified neurological symptoms in many patients with COVID-19.
This week he has his eyes on a new study from the U.K., published by the Lancet, which presents over 120 case reports of individuals with neurological manifestations. While the most common symptom found was stroke (reported in 57 individuals), the study also found 39 instances of patients experiencing an “altered mental status” — defined as “an acute alteration in personality, behavior, cognition or consciousness.”
Josephson says this phenomenon, which predates COVID-19, is referred to by many names, such as ICU delirium, hospital delirium or — the official term used in the neurology world — encephalopathy. To help clarify what that means and what we know about COVID-19 and the brain thus far, Yahoo Life spoke about it all with Josephson. Here’s what he had to say.
Yahoo Life: How long have experts known that this coronavirus can cause neurological symptoms?
Josephson: When coronavirus first came out, we were all taught this is a respiratory illness and the bad things that come of it are the lungs. ... And I think starting with that Wuhan report, we began to realize that there were a lot of people who had neurologic and psychiatric manifestations from this disease. Some of them are relatively nonspecific things like confusion, dizziness, headache.
And what about specific things?
The specific things we’ve heard about are things like stroke, encephalopathy ... we’ve heard about people who obviously lose their sense of smell. And so this preponderance of evidence suggests that neurological psychiatric problems are relatively common, at least in these two studies, and at least in people who are ill enough to be in the hospital.
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Is it clear what’s causing so many strokes in COVID-19 patients?
The striking incidents of stroke probably has to do with blood clots forming in the body and with the heart being affected — both of which can lead to stroke.
On the psychiatric front, we’ve heard from COVID-19 survivors who have had harrowing experiences in the ICU, sharing stories of hallucinations, pulling out their own breathing tubes and fearing that the nurses were trying to kill them. Can you help explain exactly what ICU delirium is — if that’s the right term?
There are a million different names for it: delirium, ICU delirium, encephalopathy, confusion, altered, mental status. We’re all talking about the same thing, which is people who are ill in the hospital, not thinking straight. Right now we’re trying to figure out how much of that is due to a problem with the brain and how much is due to the fact that when somebody who’s elderly, or someone who’s really sick, ends up in the hospital, the incidence of confusion is very, very high. Some of it likely has to do with underlying disease, but some of that has to do with the confusing environment that’s going on in the hospital and the person’s underlying susceptibility to that. We do know it happens more in older people because presumably some of those people have underlying beginnings of problems of aging in the brain and therefore they’re not as resilient. A younger person, when they go into the hospital, that doesn’t typically occur very often.
It also seems like the high rate of delirium with this virus may be influenced by the fact that many of the things that help normalize this environment have been taken away, is that correct?
Exactly. One of the things we do to treat delirium or prevent delirium is that we know the hospital is a very unusual environment, especially the ICU. So we do things to people to help patients by bringing in their family, making it look more realistic, not having bells and alarms go off every five seconds. Well, someone who’s sick, especially in a pandemic when visitors are not allowed, all of these risk factors for delirium are exacerbated, and that’s a real problem.
Is it clear how the coronavirus is causing these reactions?
That’s the big question that is yet to be figured out ... how much of this is nonspecific. In other words, if you take an old person who’s really sick with any virus, let’s say influenza, when they go into the hospital a lot of them become confused, a lot of them get dizziness, a lot of them get headaches. So how much is just that it’s a sick person in the hospital — because we know the brain doesn’t like that for a variety of reasons — and how much of it is specific to coronavirus?
So it may be that these neurological and psychiatric reactions aren’t as connected to the virus as they seem?
[We’re trying to figure out] how much of this is due to actual invasion of the virus of the nervous system — meaning how much of it is that the virus is in the brain and the spinal fluid — and that has been a much more difficult thing to prove. There are some case reports that suggest in these patients, that virus may be directly in the nervous system. But a lot of these case reports have not been able to show that, suggesting that many of these effects may just be due to a systemic illness rather than to coronaviruses hiding in the brain and attacking it directly. But we don’t know the answer to that definitively. How many of these are actual viruses in the brain or virus in the nervous system? My guess is that it’s going to be a minority, but it’s not going to be unheard-of.
For the latest coronavirus news and updates, follow along at https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus. According to experts, people over 60 and those who are immunocompromised continue to be the most at risk. If you have questions, please reference the CDC’s and WHO’s resource guides. 
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Detroit man, 19, sentenced to life in prison for killing two gay men, transgender woman

DETROIT — A 19-year-old Detroit man has been sentenced to three life terms in prison with no chance of parole for gunning down two gay men and a transgender woman who authorities believe were targeted because of their sexual orientation.
A Wayne County jury convicted Devon Kareem Robinson of first-degree premeditated murder in March in the May 2019 killings of 21-year-old Alunte Davis, and 20-year-olds Timothy Blancher and Paris Cameron.
Devon Kareem Robinson. (Wayne County Prosecutor's Office / via AP)
AP
Robinson was also sentenced Tuesday to 10 to 20 years for each of two counts of assault with intent to murder and two years consecutively for five felony firearm counts.
Prosecutors said Davis and Blancher were gay men and Cameron was a transgender woman. Prosecutors and police believe they were targeted because of their sexual orientation.
The three victims were in the living room of a Detroit home following a house party attended by about 15 people. Robinson is also accused of shooting and wounding two other people inside the house.
A survivor testified in November that Robinson fired so many bullets that the victims’ blood seeped through the walls.
“The defendant’s actions were disturbing on so many levels,” Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said in a statement.
“We will continue to be vigilant in our fight to eradicate hate in Wayne County and beyond,” she said.
Robinson’s attorney, Evan Callanan Jr., said during a November hearing that there was no evidence against his client, calling prosecutors’ allegations “a fanciful theory.”

COVID-19 cases among immigrant detainees could be 15 times higher than ICE reports

Immigration and Customs Enforcement could be severely underreporting the number of COVID-19 infections in detention centers, according to estimated projections released Tuesday by the Vera Institute of Justice.
ICE has reported 752 people who have tested positive for the coronavirus currently in custody who are either in isolation or are being monitored, according to the agency’s most recent data. The number of detainees in ICE custody is currently 23,429.
Based on its own epidemiological model, the Vera Institute estimates the number of COVID-19 cases could be 15 times higher than what ICE reports.
"Through simulating a 60-day period beginning in mid-March 2020, Vera’s model estimated that nearly 1 in 5 people detained for any length of time during this period would be infected with COVID-19," the report said.
The nonprofit, which focuses on criminal justice, used recent ICE data to look at the number of new detainees and the frequent transfers between detention centers. The institute took into consideration data from fiscal year 2016 on ICE bookings and transfers and extrapolated from those historical patterns.
“They [ICE] haven’t been transparent, so this is our best attempt at making an educated guess,” said Dennis Kuo, a senior data scientist and the author of the report.
If ICE continued its pattern of transferring people, it would have made 1,744 transfers by the end of the simulation period. At this point, 9 percent of the people who have ever had COVID-19 would be transferred by ICE at least once while being actively contagious.
“One of the big issues is that ICE is always transferring people in large volume,” said Nina Siulc, director of research at the Vera Institute.
Kuo called the results of the simulation “alarming.” The simulation ran from mid-March to mid-May and at the conclusion, the virus had not peaked yet in the detention centers.
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In an emailed statement to NBC News, ICE stated: "Since the outbreak of COVID-19, ICE has taken extensive steps to safeguard all detainees, staff and contractors, including: reducing the number of detainees in custody by placing individuals on alternatives to detention programs, suspending social visitation, incorporating social distancing practices with staggered meals and recreation times, and through the use of cohorting and medical isolation."
ICE also stated that its "detained population has steadily dropped by more than 7,000 individuals since March 1, 2020 as a result of the decrease in book-ins when compared to this time last year," as well as the release of more than 900 people after consulting with medical professionals and experts over ways to reduce the spread of the virus.
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ICE carries out raids in central Mississippi
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Siulc underscored that even though the institute's study shows a rate of infection much higher than ICE has reported, “it’s very clear that it’s likely to be a low estimate.” She said the study did not take into account potential infections spreading between contractors and detainees. ICE reports infections among its staff but not employees of private contractors.
ICE has continued to book thousands of people into custody during the pandemic and the authors of the report say this is putting detainees further at risk.
“It’s putting new people into facilities -- that we know from their own testimony before Congress -- are not equipped with basic public health measures,” Siulc said. “Why they are apprehending people during a pandemic is not something they have been asked to account for,” she said.
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8 Louisiana officers indicted for alleged beating of 2 men stopped for seatbelt violation

Eight police officers in Louisiana were indicted on charges of excessive force for allegedly beating two men who had raised their arms in surrender when pulled over for seatbelt violations.
Caddo Parish District Attorney James Stewart announced Tuesday that each of the officers in Shreveport has been charged with one count of malfeasance in office in connection to the arrest in January.
The Jan. 24 incident began when an officer attempted to pull over driver Chico Bell and his passenger, Damon Robinson, for seatbelt violations as the two men were leaving a private home.
The men didn't stop the vehicle, and a pursuit began, with video from a police car "showing that Bell threw several unknown objects from the window of his Chevrolet truck during the chase,” the district attorney wrote in a press release.
From left, top row: Police officers Aaron Jaudon, D'Andre Jackson, Mark Ordoyne and William Isenhour. Bottom row: Police officers Christopher McConnell, Brandon Walker, Treveion Brooks and David Francis. (Caddo Sheriff's Office via AP)
Dash-cam footage from a sheriff's deputy's vehicle shows what happened when the two men stopped their car, the district attorney said.
“Bell and Robinson raised their hands, and then stuck both hands up out of the windows of the truck, in an apparent attempt to surrender without resistance,” the release said.
But Shreveport officers pulled Bell from the truck through the driver’s window, according to the prosecutor, and “began striking, kicking, and tasing him.” Medical records show he suffered injuries, including a broken orbital plate, the release said.
Robinson was meanwhile "punched multiple times through the open truck window" by one Shreveport officer as his "hands were being held by other officers," the district attorney said.
“SPD officers then took Robinson to the ground, where one officer apparently struck him in the face with a flashlight, despite Robinson’s hands being behind his back,” the release said. Robinson's nose was broken “in several places” from the attack.
A sheriff's deputy at the scene said the violence occurred even though Robinson's was compliant during the arrest, which police body- and dash-cam footage verified, the district attorney said.
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The indicted officers are: Aaron Jaudon, D’Andre Jackson, Mark Ordoyne, William Isenhour, Christopher McConnell, Brandon Walker, Treveion Brooks, and David Francis.
Christopher McConnell was fired on May 8, Mark Ordoyne resigned on June 17, and the other six officers were placed on leave, Angie Willhite, a public information officer with the Shreveport PD, told NBC News in an email on Wednesday.
The city's police chief, Ben Raymond, said in a statement to NBC News that he launched an investigation on the day of the arrest.
“All parties are innocent until proven guilty and in order to preserve the officers rights to due process I will not make any further comments at this time,” the chief said.
In response to the charges, Shreveport Mayor Adrian Perkins told NBC affiliate KTAL that he is working toward police reform.
“The nation is going through a reckoning because, in the past, officers were too infrequently held accountable for bad policing,” Perkins said in a statement. “While it isn’t pretty, this is the change citizens are demanding.”
Stewart said police recovered “very small amounts of ecstasy, cocaine and a stolen gun” that were thrown from the window of the car during the chase. Bell was arrested for possession of controlled substances, obstruction of justice, cyberstalking, and a fugitive matter, and Robinson for resisting an officer. The district attorney dismissed all charges against the two men because of the alleged excessive force used.
An attorney representing three of the eight officers — Brooks, Jackson and Isenhour — said he believes his clients will be exonerated in court.
“We’re very disappointed in the indictment. These officers were doing their job that day,” lawyer Dhu Thompson said, according to KTAL, “It appears from the early evidence, of course we’re still gathering facts and investigating it, but these individuals chose to run from the police, endangering themselves, the officers and society.”
It was not immediately clear who is representing the other five officers.

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