Abstract

Introduction:Movement disorders are increasingly described in hospitalized and milder cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection, despite a very low prevalence compared to the total patients.Methods:We reviewed the scientific literature published in English, spanning from the initial descriptions of COVID-19 until January 25, 2021, in the PubMed/MEDLINE database.Results:We identified 93 new-onset movement disorders cases (44 articles) from 200 papers screened in the database or reference lists. Myoclonus was present in 63.4% (n = 59), ataxia in 38.7% (n = 36), action/postural tremor in 10.8% (n = 10), rigid-akinetic syndrome in 5.38% (n = 5), oculomotor abnormalities in 20.4% (n = 19), catatonia in 2.1% (n = 2), dystonia in 1.1% (n = 1), chorea in 1.1% (n = 1), functional (psychogenic) movement disorders in 3.2% (n = 3) of the reported COVID-19 cases with any movement disorder. Encephalopathy was a common association (n = 37, 39.78%).Discussion:Comprehensive neurophysiological, clinical, and neuroimaging descriptions of movement disorders in the setting of SARS-CoV-2 infection are still lacking, and their pathophysiology may be related to inflammatory, postinfectious, or even indirect mechanisms not specific to SARS-CoV-2, such as ischemic-hypoxic brain insults, drug effects, sepsis, kidney failure. Cortical/subcortical myoclonus, which the cited secondary mechanisms can largely cause, seems to be the most common hyperkinetic abnormal movement, and it might occur in association with encephalopathy and ataxia.Conclusion:This brief review contributes to the clinical description of SARS-CoV-2 potential neurological manifestations, assisting clinical neurologists in identifying features of these uncommon syndromes as a part of COVID-19 symptomatology.Highlights– Movement disorders are probably uncommon neurological manifestations in SARS-CoV-2 infection;– Myoclonus is the most reported movement disorder associated with COVID-19, its clinical complications or pharmacological management;– The pathophysiology is yet not well-understood but can include systemic inflammation, autoimmune mechanisms, or hypoxia.

Highlights

  • Movement disorders are increasingly described in hospitalized and milder cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection, despite a very low prevalence compared to the total patients

  • Myoclonus was present in 63.4% (n = 59), ataxia in 38.7% (n = 36), action/postural tremor in 10.8% (n = 10), rigid-akinetic syndrome in 5.38% (n = 5), oculomotor abnormalities in 20.4% (n = 19), catatonia in 2.1% (n = 2), dystonia in 1.1% (n = 1), chorea in 1.1% (n = 1), functional movement disorders in 3.2% (n = 3) of the reported COVID-19 cases with any movement disorder

  • This brief review contributes to the clinical description of SARS-CoV-2 potential neurological manifestations, assisting clinical neurologists in identifying features of these uncommon syndromes as a part of COVID-19 symptomatology

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Summary

Introduction

Movement disorders are increasingly described in hospitalized and milder cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection, despite a very low prevalence compared to the total patients. Numerous putative dissemination mechanisms of the central nervous system (CNS) were hypothesized, including direct retrograde spread through the olfactory nerve via the transcribiform pathway or hematogenous spread via the blood-brain barrier. The neuronal damage could happen through different but not mutually exclusive mechanisms, including direct viral insult, cytokine release syndrome, hypoxia, immune-mediated neuroinflammation (post or para-infectious), coagulopathy, and endothelial dysfunction syndrome [1]. Movement disorders are increasingly being described among hospitalized patients and in milder cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection, despite a possible very low prevalence in comparison to the total cases [3, 4]. This study aims to summarize and describe, through a systematic procedure, relevant clinical and ancillary exam findings in patients with new-onset movement disorders associated with COVID-19

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