
The Pandemic Appears to Have Accelerated Brain Aging, Even in People Who Never Got Covid
Researchers at the University of Nottingham in the UK analyzed brain images captured before and after the onset of the health crisis. The scientists found that the brains of those who lived through the pandemic appeared to age faster over its duration compared to those whose brains were only scanned prior to March 2020.
'What surprised me most was that even people who hadn't had Covid showed significant increases in brain aging rates,' said Ali-Reza Mohammadi-Nejad, a coauthor of the study, in a statement on the university's website. 'It really shows how much the experience of the pandemic itself, everything from isolation to uncertainty, may have affected our brain health.'
The team used longitudinal data from the UK Biobank, a huge dataset that is periodically collecting biological information from roughly half a million people over a long period of time and which includes MRI scans of nearly 1,000 adults. Of these people, some had received two scans before the pandemic (the control group), while others had one before and one after confinement and health restrictions had been implemented in response to the viral outbreak (the 'pandemic' group).
'The longitudinal MRI data acquired before and after the pandemic from the UK Biobank gave us a rare window to observe how such a major life event can affect the brain,' said Stamatios Sotiropoulos, professor of computational neuroimaging at the University of Nottingham and a coauthor of the study, in a statement.
To estimate each person's 'brain age,' the researchers trained a machine-learning model on more than 15,000 healthy volunteers without chronic diseases to allow them to determine how much older or younger a brain looked relative to its chronological age. They then used this tool to assess the ages of the MRI brain scans in the two Biobank groups. When looking at the second scans in each group, the mean difference between chronological and measured age was 5.5 months higher in the pandemic group compared to the control group.
The researchers also found that this acceleration of brain aging was more marked in older people, men, and those from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds, such as those with low educational levels, precarious jobs, or housing and health difficulties.
'This study reminds us that brain health is shaped not only by illness but by our everyday environment,' said Dorothee Auer, lead author of the study, in in a statement released by the University of Nottingham. 'The pandemic put a strain on people's lives, especially those already facing disadvantage.'
Although brain aging was seen universally among those living through the pandemic, only those infected went on to show measurable cognitive impairment, a symptom of Covid that has been documented in the past. The study found that those in the pandemic group who had Covid between the two scans experienced a drop in performance in mental flexibility and processing speed tests. In contrast, those who were not infected showed no significant cognitive changes, suggesting that structural aging does not always translate into visible functional symptoms.
However, the authors acknowledge that there are some important limitations to this observational study, which could bias the results. These include the interval of time between people's scans differing between the two groups, as well as the UK Biobank lacking representation from the most marginalized sectors of the British population.
The researchers also highlighted the possibility of reversibility, as only brain scans from two time points were analyzed, meaning that there may be neurological recovery in these people in subsequent years. 'We don't yet know if the observed changes can be reversed, but it is an encouraging idea,' Auer said.
This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
3 hours ago
- The Hill
Where the summer COVID-19 infections are hitting hardest
The number of people with COVID-19 in the U.S. is low but increasing, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data released Friday. COVID-19 is trending up in many Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Southern, and West Coast states. The agency said infections are 'growing or likely growing' in 40 states, based on emergency department visit data as of July 29. Infections were unchanged in nine states. The weekly percentage of emergency department visits among people diagnosed with COVID-19 is low, but growing, CDC said. Visits were highest for children younger than 4 years old, which experts said makes sense because many remain unvaccinated. WastewaterSCAN, which monitors infectious diseases through municipal wastewater systems, categorized national coronavirus levels as 'high' and trending upward since mid-July. According to CDC, the wastewater viral activity level for coronavirus is currently low, and only Alabama, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, California, Alaska and Texas reported 'high' or 'very high' levels. Experts say a lack of data is making it harder to track COVID-19 in real time, but the available information indicates the expected seasonal wave is happening. Ever since 2020, COVID-19 has peaked twice a year. Cases rise in the winter and drop into the spring, and then again in the summer as travel peaks and people seek air-conditioned indoor spaces away from the heat. While other respiratory viruses remain at low levels until the winter, experts have said COVID-19's ability to mutate sets it apart and contributes to a much higher baseline infection rate. More cases circulating year-round means more opportunities for the virus to mutate. The vaccine being updated for the coming fall season is targeted to the JN.1 variant, as it was last year. But Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has significantly narrowed recommendations on who should get the vaccine, raising significant questions about the availability and affordability come the fall. In May, Kennedy said the shots would no longer be recommended for healthy kids, a decision that health experts have said lacks scientific basis. A coalition of medical groups subsequently sued over the move. In addition, a new policy requires all updated COVID-19 vaccines to undergo extensive placebo-controlled clinical trials, as if it were a new shot rather than an update to one that already exists. The updated Covid shots are expected to be available in the fall to adults 65 and up and kids and adults with at least one medical condition that puts them at risk for severe illness — the groups exempt from the clinical trial requirement.


Politico
6 hours ago
- Politico
Experts' bird flu warning
With David Lim, Erin Schumaker and Simon Levien Driving the Day BIRD FLU LATEST — Bird flu, for the moment, appears to be under control. But experts have a warning for federal and state health officials: Fall is coming — so don't get too comfortable, Sophie and David report. Over the past few months, avian flu cases among humans, cattle and poultry have slowed — easing fears that the U.S. could be hurdling toward another major pandemic and prompting the CDC to end its emergency response. When viruses collide: Eight public health experts and two state health officials from Washington and California — two states hit especially hard by the outbreak — told POLITICO that the decision makes sense if the federal government's case count is accurate. But they warned that things could shift quickly as the weather cools off. The seasonal migration of birds and the human flu season will increase the chance of a fall influenza-bird flu mash-up, which could make it more likely that bird flu will spread among humans, the experts warned. 'The most likely scenario is that someone will get infected with both H5N1 and a seasonal flu virus, and they will swap genes, and that reassortment could kick off the next pandemic,' said Jennifer Nuzzo, a professor of epidemiology and director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University School of Public Health. And the emergency's end comes after the Trump administration canceled hundreds of millions of dollars it had awarded to Moderna to help the company develop an mRNA vaccine for flu strains with pandemic potential — including avian flu — leading some experts worried the U.S. isn't doing enough to prepare for the possibility of an avian flu outbreak. 'We are going to see another influenza pandemic, and it could be much worse than we saw with Covid, and we're not preparing for that at all,' said Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. 'We have an opportunity with mRNA technology to make a vaccine much faster … and yet, if you look right now, we've cut all funding within the U.S. government for that type of work.' An accurate case count? The World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and the World Organisation for Animal Health recently issued a joint assessment that the global public health risk of avian flu is low. The groups said their confidence in the assessment is medium, partly because there 'may be biases in surveillance, testing and reporting.' Nuzzo cautioned that hesitation among farmworkers — many of whom are undocumented — to be tested for the virus, as well as local politics, might make it more difficult to test people who've been potentially exposed to the virus in the fall. 'A matter of time': Bird flu this summer has been comparatively quieter compared with this time last year, and Nuzzo doesn't think the virus is spreading under the radar at similar levels seen last summer. But she cautioned that while it's not clear when another flu pandemic will emerge, it's only a matter of time. Three major flu pandemics struck during the 1900s, part of a pattern of recurring outbreaks throughout history. Former CDC principal deputy director Nirav Shah said increased global connectivity, the convergence of the boundaries between animals and humans, climate change and the rise of dense cities mean the number of pandemic flus in the past century should be viewed as a baseline, even though society has new treatments and other methods to intervene faster than in the past. WELCOME TO MONDAY PULSE. The Senate adjourned Saturday evening, meaning we're officially in August recess season. Send your tips, scoops and feedback to khooper@ and sgardner@ and follow along @kelhoops and @sophie_gardnerj. AROUND THE AGENCIES BLUE STATE REBUTTAL — Blue states filed a brief Friday opposing the Trump administration's request to the Supreme Court for relief from a lower court's order, Erin reports. That order had blocked the administration from cutting grants related to diversity, equity and inclusion from the National Institutes of Health. 'The only unlawful decisions here are the federal government's,' the brief says. 'The only urgency is that manufactured by NIH in its haste to implement its unprecedented and unreasoned policies. The government has not shown any need for a stay.' In addition to being unnecessary, plaintiffs argued a stay would harm universities and institutions in their states and could hurt the public if, for example, clinical trials are canceled. Plaintiff states included Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin. The administration requested relief last week on the grounds that the federal government shouldn't be required to pay for research not aligned with President Donald Trump's executive orders and his administration's priorities. Key context: U.S. District Judge William Young ordered the administration in June to restore hundreds of scientific grants the NIH terminated this year. During a hearing on two lawsuits about grant terminations, the Massachusetts judge, a former President Ronald Reagan appointee, rebuked the administration for what he called 'appalling' and 'palpably clear' discrimination against racial minorities and LGBTQ+ Americans. Industry Intel COMMON GROUND WITH AMA — Dr. Bobby Mukkamala, the American Medical Association's new president, is seeking common ground with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., even as the AMA has skirmished with Kennedy over his changes at HHS, Simon reports. Mukkamala told POLITICO on Friday he supports Kennedy's push to swap out unhealthy food additives, like Coca-Cola's decision to replace high-fructose corn syrup with cane sugar in its soda recipe. He added that he wants to prevent food producers from 'dictating' Americans' diets. Mukkamala, an otolaryngologist, has a background in lifestyle medicine, which lines up with Kennedy's interest in preventive care. But Mukkamala, who has been gearing up for his role for several months, said he hasn't met or spoken with the secretary. He earlier sent two letters to Kennedy on his personal letterhead that he described as entreaties to find common ground upon his appointment as secretary. His letters went unanswered, Mukkamala said at the Asian American Journalists Association conference in Seattle on Friday. Kennedy has been critical of the AMA, arguing it doesn't have patients' best interests in mind, as the group has pushed back and argued that the secretary has devalued expertise in HHS ranks. The doctors' group criticized the purge of experts from a vaccine safety panel and warned gravely about a similar dismissal Kennedy might take against an HHS preventative care task force. Mukkamala, in his AAJA session, was also skeptical of Susan Monarez, the first nonphysician to lead the CDC in decades after her confirmation Tuesday. 'To have someone that is a medical doctor is critically important,' he said. 'And you put them in a position like that, you have to wonder, how good are they going to be at that, right?' Monarez earned a doctorate in microbiology and immunology and was deputy director of ARPA-H, the agency former President Joe Biden created several years ago to invest in high-risk, high-reward research. Public Health NEW KENNEDY OP-ED — On Friday afternoon, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took to a publication called Trial Site News — a website that often publishes anti-vaccine activists — to criticize a recent study by Danish researchers that found no harms associated with exposure to low amounts of aluminum through early childhood vaccinations. Before Kennedy became health secretary, he spread misinformation about vaccines and co-founded the Children's Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group. The study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine in July, used nationwide registry data of more than 1,000,000 children to look for links between aluminum exposure and 50 chronic disorders, including autism. Kennedy argues that the study's design makes its results unreliable, including the decision to exclude children diagnosed with certain congenital or preexisting conditions from the study. 'The architects of this study meticulously designed it not to find harm,' Kennedy writes. 'From the outset, Andersson et al. excluded the very children most likely to reveal injuries associated with high exposures to aluminum adjuvants in childhood vaccines.' The study's first author did not respond to a request for comment. The findings largely align with other studies that have found no evidence linking vaccines to autism or other neurological conditions. WHAT WE'RE READING POLITICO's Samuel Benson reports that West Virginia schools have banned certain artificial food dyes. CBS News' Kaia Hubbard reports on CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz announcing applications for the rural hospital fund will go out in early September.


UPI
6 hours ago
- UPI
Korean scientists say they developed oral drug against COVID-19
An illustration is intended to show how CP-COV03, or Xafty, works against COVID-19 in the body. Image courtesy of Hyundai Bioscience SEOUL, Aug. 4 (UPI) -- A group of scientists, primarily from South Korean universities, has confirmed the efficacy of an oral anti-viral treatment, called CP-COV03 or Xafty, against COVID-19 after a clinical trial. If a later-stage trial is successful and the medication is approved by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, the drug could be available next year. Developed by Korea's biotech company Hyundai Bioscience, the drug was found to address major COVID-19 symptoms listed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, including cough, headache, sore throat, nausea and chills. The findings were published in the latest edition of the peer-reviewed journal Nature Communications. "We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial with 300 patients to learn that CP-COV03 was effective in improving COVID-19 symptoms for more than 48 hours, with no serious adverse events," Dankook University professor Choy Jin-ho told UPI. He is one of the paper's corresponding co-authors. "Patients treated with CP-COV03 returned to usual health more quickly and had a lower risk of hospitalization compared to the control group. This shows that the drug is safe and effective in patients suffering from mild to moderate COVID-19," he said. Choy said he expects that CP-COV03 to have strong commercial potential because it was based on niclosamide, a well-known medication previously used to treat tapeworm infections. "Niclosamide's clinical use has been limited due to poor solubility and bioavailability. However, our study indicates that niclosamide-based CP-COV03 works as a safer and more effective alternative to previous COVID-19 treatments such as Paxlovid," Choy said. Hyundai Bioscience noted that the Seoul-based company would develop CP-COV03 as a versatile anti-viral treatment for a range of diseases, beyond just COVID-19. "We are prepared to produce CP-COV03 as a broad-spectrum treatment once we are authorized to do so in our target countries," Hyundai Bioscience CEO Bae Byoung-jun said in a phone interview. "To use CP-COV03 as a treatment for dengue fever, for example, we have received approval to start a seamless phase II/III clinical trial in Vietnam. We hope to launch the study this year, with the aim of bringing the drug to market next year," he said.