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Tom Kindlon
Tom Kindlon
@tomkindlon@disabled.social  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

2/
From Australia:

Altered brain tissue microstructure and neurochemical profiles in long COVID and recovered COVID-19 individuals: A multimodal MRI study

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354625002005

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Altered brain tissue microstructure and neurochemical profiles in long COVID and recovered COVID-19 individuals: A multimodal MRI study — Thapaliya et al.
"Our study identified altered signal intensity, abnormal tissue microstructure, and imbalanced neurochemicals in long COVID and COVID-19 recovered healthy controls. Importantly, we also found a significant association between T1w/T2w signal intensity and clinical measures, suggesting a potential link between myelin content and symptom severity."
Altered brain tissue microstructure and neurochemical profiles in long COVID and recovered COVID-19 individuals: A multimodal MRI study — Thapaliya et al. "Our study identified altered signal intensity, abnormal tissue microstructure, and imbalanced neurochemicals in long COVID and COVID-19 recovered healthy controls. Importantly, we also found a significant association between T1w/T2w signal intensity and clinical measures, suggesting a potential link between myelin content and symptom severity."
Altered brain tissue microstructure and neurochemical profiles in long COVID and recovered COVID-19 individuals: A multimodal MRI study — Thapaliya et al. "Our study identified altered signal intensity, abnormal tissue microstructure, and imbalanced neurochemicals in long COVID and COVID-19 recovered healthy controls. Importantly, we also found a significant association between T1w/T2w signal intensity and clinical measures, suggesting a potential link between myelin content and symptom severity."
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