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To: palmer

“The severity of COVID-19 had a clear effect on subsequent neurological diagnoses (Table 4, Table 5, figure 2). Overall, COVID-19 was associated with increased risk of neurological and psychiatric outcomes, but the incidences and HRs of these were greater in patients who had required hospitalisation, and markedly so in those who had required ITU admission or had developed encephalopathy, even after extensive propensity score matching for other factors (eg, age or previous cerebrovascular disease). Potential mechanisms for this association include viral invasion of the CNS,10, 11 hypercoagulable states,22 and neural effects of the immune response.9 However, the incidence and relative risk of neurological and psychiatric diagnoses were also increased even in patients with COVID-19 who did not require hospitalisation.
Some specific neurological diagnoses merit individual mention. Consistent with several other reports,23, 24 the risk of cerebrovascular events (ischaemic stroke and intracranial haemorrhage) was elevated after COVID-19, with the incidence of ischaemic stroke rising to almost one in ten (or three in 100 for a first stroke) in patients with encephalopathy. A similarly increased risk of stroke in patients who had COVID-19 compared with those who had influenza has been reported.25 Our previous study reported preliminary evidence for an association between COVID-19 and dementia.14 The data in this study support this association. Although the estimated incidence was modest in the whole COVID-19 cohort (table 2), 2·66% of patients older than 65 years (appendix p 28) and 4·72% who had encephalopathy (table 2), received a first diagnosis of dementia within 6 months of having COVID-19. The associations between COVID-19 and cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diagnoses are concerning, and information about the severity and subsequent course of these diseases is required.”


96 posted on 04/08/2021 9:26:10 PM PDT by familyop
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To: familyop
There is not a single number in any of those excerpts that compares COVID to flu. The fact is 33% is a lie of omission. The correct headline is 33% from COVID compared to 25% with the flu or other resp. illness. Leaving out the second part is misleading. Lancet is a journal that publishes slop. Not saying this study is slop and will be retracted, but it is certainly being used to mislead people about the relative risk of anxiety or other neurological disorders from COVID.
105 posted on 04/09/2021 5:35:20 PM PDT by palmer (Democracy Dies Six Ways from Sunday)
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