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Infectious Disease: COVID-19
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Total 270 results found since Jan 2013.

Neurological Manifestations and Their Effect on Outcome in Second Wave of COVID-19 Pandemic: A Retrospective Cohort Study
CONCLUSION: The presence of neurological manifestations is associated with greater morbidity and mortality in patients with COVID-19 and thus warrants more aggressive treatment. However, a study of association of individual neurological manifestation with severity of COVID-19 will provide a more meaningful insight regarding the approach to the management of such patients.PMID:36082880 | DOI:10.5005/japi-11001-0101
Source: Journal of the Association of Physicians of India - September 9, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Arti Muley Sona Mitra Hema Bhojani Ashish Bavishi Dinesh Nakum Priya Kotwani Vaibhav Patwardhan Jahnavi Shah Shourya Mahendru Source Type: research

Air pollution and cerebrovascular disorders with special reference to Asia: An overview
Conclusion: Even though air pollution poses a significant threat to human health, a great number of countries still fail to achieve internationally agreed air quality standards. Air pollution should be recognized among the most significant controllable risk factors for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease prevention and treatment.
Source: Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology - September 7, 2022 Category: Neurology Authors: Bushra Taimuri Sohail Lakhani Maryam Javed Divyani Garg Vasundhara Aggarwal Man Mohan Mehndiratta Mohammad Wasay Source Type: research

COVID-19 Can Increase Risk of Psychiatric Disorders for Up to Two Years
The increased risk of depression and anxiety that patients experience after developing COVID-19 typically subsides within two months, according to astudy published yesterday inThe Lancet Psychiatry. However, patients may have an elevated risk for developing other psychiatric and neurological conditions, such as psychosis, brain fog, and seizures, for up to two years after their infections.“The results have important implications for patients and health services as it suggests new cases of neurological conditions linked to COVID-19 infection are likely to occur for a considerable time after the pandemic has subsided,” s...
Source: Psychiatr News - August 18, 2022 Category: Psychiatry Tags: adults anxiety brain fog children COVID-19 delta dementia depression older adults omicron psychotic disorder seizures The Lancet Psychiatry Source Type: research