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Alzheimer's & Dementia ; 17(S7):e052037, 2021.
Article in English | Wiley | ID: covidwho-1664352

ABSTRACT

Background In early 2020, COVID-19 outbreak struck France leading to a national lockdown between March 17th and May 11th. While standard in-person medical consultation was complicated, telemedicine dramatically expanded. In order to evaluate the impact of this unpreceded situation on clinical practice and use of psychoactive drug in dementia care, we conducted a nationwide clinical prospective and retrospective study. Method During the lockdown period, telemedicine patients? demographic and clinical data were retrospectively collected from 7 French memory clinics (telemedicine cohort). Clinical diagnoses, treatment changes, cognitive modifications since last consultations and living conditions during the lockdown were systematically retrieved. In Rouen site, we also included patients only reached by a secretary to propose a postponed visit after lockdown (no-telemedicine cohort) and patients seen in 2019 during the same period of the year (Rouen-2019). The primary outcome was any change in psychoactive drug and a specific analysis on sedative treatment increase was the secondary outcome, defined as any increase in the prescriptions of antipsychotics or benzodiazepines. Result The telemedicine cohort included 874 patients (73 from Rouen), while no-telemedicine control cohort and Rouen-2019 cohorts included respectively 86 and 234 patients (table 1). In the telemedicine cohort, treatments were modified for 10.7% of the patients with more treatment modification among the patients living with a relative (+5.8% (CI95% [0.2%;11.4%] p=0.04) and among the patients with Alzheimer?s disease (+12.2% (CI95% [7.1%;17.3%] p<0.001). When comparing therapeutic strategies in 2020 and 2019 for Rouen site, 24.6% of the patients had their treatment modified in 2020 and 12.4% in 2019. That difference was however not statically significant with an adjusted percentage difference of -4% (CI95% [-10.8%;3.4%] p=0.27, including the telemedicine and no-telemedicine cohorts for 2020. Conclusion Telemedicine seems to have had only minor negative impacts on clinical practice in memory clinics.

2.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 43(2): 593-597, 2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1460200

ABSTRACT

This study aims to evaluate the impact of French national lockdown of 55 days on brain metabolism of patients with neurological disorders. Whole-brain voxel-based PET analysis was used to correlate 18 F-FDG metabolism to the number of days after March 17, 2020 (in 95 patients; mean age: 54.3 years ± 15.7; 59 men), in comparison to the same period in 2019 before the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak (in 212 patients; mean age: 59.5 years ± 15.8; 114 men), and to the first 55 days of deconfinement (in 188 patients; mean age: 57.5 years ± 16.5; 93 men). Lockdown duration was negatively correlated to the metabolism of the sensory-motor cortex with a prevailing effect on the left dominant pyramidal tract and on younger patients, also including the left amygdala, with only partial reversibility after 55 days of deconfinement. Weak overlap was found with the reported pattern of hypometabolism in long COVID (<9%). Restriction of physical activities, and possible related deconditioning, and social isolation may lead to functional disturbances of sensorimotor and emotional brain networks. Of note, this metabolic pattern seems distinct to those reported in long COVID. Further longitudinal studies with longer follow-up are needed to evaluate clinical consequences and relationships on cognitive and mental health against functional deactivation hypothesis, and to extend these findings to healthy subjects in the context of lockdown.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , COVID-19 , Pandemics , Quarantine , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/diagnostic imaging , COVID-19/complications , COVID-19/metabolism , Emotions , Exercise , Female , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Motor Cortex/metabolism , Nerve Net/metabolism , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals , Retrospective Studies , Social Isolation , Somatosensory Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Somatosensory Cortex/metabolism , Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome
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