Skip to content
Tagged COVID-19 Biotechnology SARS-CoV-2 Life Science cancer CORONAVIRUS pandemic
BioXone

BioXone

rethinking future

May 12, 2025
  • About
  • BiotechTodayNews
    • IndiaWeekly Biotech News of India
    • WorldWeekly Biotech News of The World
  • DNA-TalesArticles
    • BiotechnopediaInteresting articles written by BioXone members and associates.
    • Scientists’ CornerArticles from the pioneers of Biotechnology.
    • Cellular CommunicationInterview of greatest researchers’ in the field.
  • Myth-LysisFact Check
  • Signalling PathwayCareer related updates
    • ExaminationsExamination related articles.
    • Job and InternshipJobs and Internship related articles.
  • Courses
  • Contact

Most Viewed This Week

October 17, 2023October 16, 2023

The Corrosion Prediction from the Corrosion Product Performance

1
October 1, 2023September 30, 2023

Nitrogen Resilience in Waterlogged Soybean plants

2
September 28, 2023September 28, 2023

Cell Senescence in Type II Diabetes: Therapeutic Potential

3
September 26, 2023September 25, 2023

Transgene-Free Canker-Resistant Citrus sinensis with Cas12/RNP

4
September 25, 2023September 25, 2023

AI Literacy in Early Childhood Education: Challenges and Opportunities

5
September 22, 2023October 1, 2023

Sustainable Methanol Vapor Sensor Made with Molecularly Imprinted Polymer

6

Search Field

Subscribe Now

  • Home
  • DNA-Tales
  • BRAIN FOG: A temporary post-COVID-19 brain disorder

Sathyabama University Research Fellow Job | Applications Invited

Central University of Rajasthan Life Science Research Fellow Job

BRAIN FOG: A temporary post-COVID-19 brain disorder
  • Biotechnopedia
  • DNA-Tales

BRAIN FOG: A temporary post-COVID-19 brain disorder

bioxone January 7, 2021January 7, 2021

Natasha Chakraborty, Amity University Kolkata

On the 11th of March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) outbreak as a pandemic that spans almost the entire world. Starting from the initial months of 2020, when the birth of this pandemic-driven worldwide havoc was witnessed, to now at the beginning of 2021, we are still fighting to survive against the deadly virus. Billions of people all across the continents have been affected by the pandemic in some manner or the other. Some lost their very livelihoods due to the crushing economy caused by complete lockdowns, whereas a million others who directly fell prey to the very disease itself. Yet, quite surprisingly, the bigger percentage of the population in most countries have somehow survived through this deadly pandemic, some through speedy recovery and others who were completely untouched by it!

However, getting tested as “negative” for COVID-19 after the disease runs its course, may not necessarily be indicative of having become completely free from the virus in reality. Scientists have discovered new effects of the Coronavirus disease in a recent study known as the ‘COVID Symptom Study’. One of the symptoms highlighted in the article referred to as “Brain Fog” was observed during the recovery phase amongst certain COVID-19 patients, in whom the infection lasted for more than 3 to 12 weeks due to pre-existing neurological disorders. Another study conducted by the US-based – Indiana University School of Medicine, has found that nearly more than 50% of the people who suffered from COVID-19 for more than 4 weeks, were also suffering from Brain-Fog. It is observed that the brain fog condition among the COVID-19 patients was triggered by “persistent immune activation”.

Brain Fog is now being explained as the inability to concentrate or focus on something in particular. A person having Brain Fog depicts the loss of memory and an inability to focus on various things in a specific sort-of manner. Scientists hypothesized potential blood-clots caused by the coronavirus disease, to be the root cause. Although they have no confirmed data about the main cause for this rather unusual aftereffect of the disease. 

According to a neurologist- Dr Smriti Mandana, the blood of a patient suffering from the coronavirus disease is denser than the normal in comparison. This could cause resistance in the flow of blood to the patient’s brain. And because of this disruption in the pace at which oxygen-rich blood flows into the brain, few regions of the brain slows down, rendering a decrease in the functionality associated with the affected region of the brain. 

Symptoms of the post-COVID-19 effect of Brain Fog:

  • Headache
  • Loss of focus
  • Loss of concentration
  • Loss in thinking ability and memory retaining capacity

Although the main cause or treatment for this disease is yet to be confirmed via in-depth research, few simple exercises may reduce the risk of acquiring Brain Fog after COVID-19 infection, according to doctors. They are- Brain exercises, meditation, controlled deep-breathing of fresh air, intake of sufficient amount of water, and playing brain-games like solving hard puzzles. 

Also read: An aid to the pandemic: Development of the low-cost, highly efficient ventilator by UK scientists

Source: Couzin-Frankel, J. (2020). From ‘brain fog’ to heart damage, COVID-19’s lingering problems alarm scientists. Science. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abe1147

  • The Corrosion Prediction from the Corrosion Product Performance
  • Nitrogen Resilience in Waterlogged Soybean plants
  • Cell Senescence in Type II Diabetes: Therapeutic Potential
  • Transgene-Free Canker-Resistant Citrus sinensis with Cas12/RNP
  • AI Literacy in Early Childhood Education: Challenges and Opportunities

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Related

Tagged after-effects blood clot brain fog coronavirus disease coronavirus infection exercises neurological disorders pandemic post-COVID-19 symptoms

2 thoughts on “BRAIN FOG: A temporary post-COVID-19 brain disorder”

  1. Pingback: MitoPunch - a new high-Performance Mitochondria Transfer Device - BioXone
  2. Pingback: A lawsuit filed against Sci-Hub & Libgen endangers the future of research in India - BioXone

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Next Post
  • Job and Internship
  • Signaling Pathway

Central University of Rajasthan Life Science Research Fellow Job

bioxone January 7, 2021

-Shristi Sharma, Team bioXone CUR JRF Life Science Job Vacancy Available. Msc candidates can apply for a Junior Research Fellow position at Central University of Rajasthan. Central University of Rajasthan research fellow posts for msc candidates, as per the details given below: Central University of Rajasthan, Department of Microbiology, School of Life Sciences Website: http://www.curaj.ac.in […]

Related Post

  • Biotechnopedia
  • DNA-Tales

Schizophrenia: when your reality is nothing but a fantasy

bioxone June 11, 2021June 11, 2021

Camelia Bhattacharyya, Amity University Kolkata “Of course, it’s happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should that mean it is not real?” that’s what Dumbledore said to Harry right? But at the end of the day, it is considered fiction, the entire Harry Potter. What if such a fictional world is the reality for someone? That’s […]

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Biotechnopedia
  • DNA-Tales

Microbes inside you are modifying your Genome

DNA tales January 15, 2022January 15, 2022

-Prerna Jha, NIT Durgapur Microbes Vs. Pathogens Organisms that are of microscopic dimensions are simply referred to as microbes. They are so individually so tiny that we often need the help of microscopes (laboratory devices with high power lenses) to see them with our naked eyes! But not all of them are harmful. Pathogens constitute […]

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Biotechnopedia
  • DNA-Tales

PSORIASIS – A GREAT DERMATOLOGIC MYSTERY

bioxone January 24, 2021January 24, 2021

Diya Adhikary, Amity University Kolkata DISCOVERY: During the Roman Empire, in the 1st Century AD, Psoriasis was described by famous encyclopedist A. Cornelius Celsus as “Impetigo” (meaning: impetigo that appears on the skin of the nails and extremities). Even though Galen, a Greek physician is considered to have been the first to have coined the […]

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Breaking News

The Corrosion Prediction from the Corrosion Product Performance

Nitrogen Resilience in Waterlogged Soybean plants

Cell Senescence in Type II Diabetes: Therapeutic Potential

Transgene-Free Canker-Resistant Citrus sinensis with Cas12/RNP

AI Literacy in Early Childhood Education: Challenges and Opportunities

Sustainable Methanol Vapor Sensor Made with Molecularly Imprinted Polymer

Exogenous Klotho as a Cognition Booster in Aging Primates

Terms and Conditions
Shipping and Delivery Policy
Cancellation and Refund Policy
Contact Us
Privacy Policy