Cognitive and Affective Performance of Brazilian Long COVID Patients: An In-Depth Analysis Before and After Psychoeducational Rehabilitation

Document Type

Article

Abstract

BackgroundLong COVID patients report various cognitive and affective symptoms that are poorly understood.ObjectiveThis study analyzed cognitive and affective performance in 208 Long COVID patients pre and post psychoeducational rehabilitation using a standardized screening test of higher cerebral functions. Identifying persistent difficulties may help guide future rehabilitation efforts.MethodsThe sample was comprised by a subset of 208 who completed psychoeducational rehabilitation from 614 Long COVID patients seeking rehabilitation. Performance on specific items was analyzed and compared to a reference sample of 114 educationally matched normal functioning adults.ResultsDetailed item analyses in 208 patients revealed persistent difficulties in the efficiency of learning and memory, affective expression, and the ability to accurately predict verbal memory performance compared to a reference sample. Long COVID patients showed variable performance deficits on attention, visual-spatial problem solving and memory measures. Language and related functions were consistently at a level commensurate with normally functioning individuals.ConclusionsPersistent cognitive and affective impairments were identified in Long COVID patients post-rehabilitation. Future programs should aim on to improve the efficiency of learning and memory, enhance the range of affective expression, and improve self-awareness of functional capacities. Rehabilitation should consider the multifactorial causes of these neuropsychological symptoms.

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Male; Female; COVID-19 (psychology, rehabilitation, complications); Middle Aged; Brazil; Adult; Aged; Neuropsychological Tests; Cognitive Dysfunction (rehabilitation, etiology); Patient Education as Topic

Publication Date

6-1-2025

Publication Title

NeuroRehabilitation

E-ISSN

1878-6448

Volume

56

Issue

4

First Page

451

Last Page

462

PubMed ID

40539617

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1177/10538135251327122

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