Speaking of Psychology - The challenge of long COVID, with Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD, and Rowena Ng, PhD
Episode Date: December 14, 2022Nearly three years after the COVID-19 pandemic began, millions of Americans are still living with the effects of the virus. Neuropsychologists Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD, and Rowena Ng, PhD, talk about th...e cognitive and mental health symptoms of long COVID, what treatments are available, and the most pressing questions that researchers need to answer to get help to patients who need it. Links Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD Rowena Ng, PhD Speaking of Psychology Home Page Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Nearly three years after the COVID-19 pandemic began, the vast majority of Americans have been
infected with COVID, and many are ready to declare the pandemic over. But millions of others
are still living with the effects of the virus. Estimates of the prevalence of long COVID
vary, but there's no doubt that COVID can, in some cases, trigger physical, mental, and
cognitive symptoms that can last for months or even years. So what is long COVID, and who
is most at risk for it? What are the mental health and cognitive symptoms? How much do
researchers know about what causes some people to develop long COVID and not others? How
similar is long COVID to other post-viral illnesses? What treatments are available? And are we
getting those treatments to the people who need them? Are kids and teens getting long COVID or
does it affect mostly adults? And finally, what are the most pressing questions that researchers
need to answer now to get help to patients who need it?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
We have two guests today, both of whom are neuropsychologists who work with patients with long COVID.
First is Dr. Tracy Van Orsdahl, a board-certified clinical neuropsychologist and associate professor
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
She's a clinician and researcher whose work with patients provides insight and motivation for her research.
She has studied cognitive functioning in patients with cancer and other illnesses, and she now studies
and treats patients in the Johns Hopkins post-acute COVID-19 clinic.
Next is Dr. Rowena Eng, a pediatric neuropsychologist at the Kennedy-Krieger Institute, where she
works with children and teens in the pediatric post-COVID rehabilitation clinic.
She was part of an interdisciplinary team that recently developed guidelines to help pediatricians and primary care physicians identify and treat long COVID.
She's also an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Thank you both for joining me today.
Thanks for having us. I'm excited to be here.
Thank you for having me.
I mentioned in the introduction that it's tough to pinpoint exactly how many people are suffering from long COVID.
Why is that?
Do doctors and researchers have any ballpark sense of how large those numbers might be?
That's a great question.
I think part of the answer depends on how you ask the question.
If you're looking at patients who are presenting to long COVID clinics,
you're likely to see elevated rates of certain patterns of symptoms.
And then when you are surveying the general population, individuals who opt into surveys
may be more likely to be those who have symptoms, our larger, more epidemiologic studies,
that try to cast a wide net of individuals who may or may not have had COVID are probably
providing one of the most accurate estimates of long COVID symptom rate out there.
So there's nowhere to report it. It's only if you happen to get somewhere in the whole system.
If you're checked into a hospital and you're there for a month, we know you've got long COVID.
Right. And there are electronic medical record studies that are looking at diagnoses
and medically captured symptoms that make it into the electronic medical record.
But those are sometimes pretty gross measures of symptom presence.
We don't know in some cases whether they existed before COVID,
if they came on right with the COVID illness,
whether they're late onset symptoms, for example.
Dr. Eng, is the prevalence as high among children and teens as it is among adults?
Do we even know?
Generally, it seems like from what we see across studies and from recent papers out from JAMA,
I think that overall there's generally a less lower valence rate of COVID infections among children or children generally.
But even within these, we tend to see a little bit lower rate of or generally in of long COVID in children and adolescents.
That doesn't necessarily take away the impact of long COVID.
but we tend to see a little bit less of a prevalence or at least less risk for COVID among children than adults.
And are the symptoms similar? Do children suffer as much as we're hearing that adults are suffering in some cases?
We see a lot of overlapping symptoms, but I think it's a little bit different in terms of how frequently it's reported in terms of like the higher,
how much that it's as one of the higher impact of all the symptoms type of symptoms that they're presenting compared to adults.
So, for example, children similarly present with fatigue, some having difficulties with physical or exercise or tolerance for exercise, cognitive complaints or having kind of feelings of talking of changes.
A lot of have mood, sleep disturbances, headaches.
But among children, they do present compared to adults, seem to present a little bit less in terms of cognitive changes compared to adults.
We tend to see more along lines of fatigue, sleep disturbance, at least in some more recent studies.
Dr. Van Ostroesto, let me ask you this. Long COVID is a new illness because COVID's only been identified among us for about the last three years or so.
Is there any official agreement as to what constitutes long COVID and how you diagnose it and how long do the symptoms need to last in order to qualify?
That also is a great question.
So the World Health Organization has issued guidelines for their criteria for long COVID.
You don't have to have a positive COVID test.
The symptoms might come on with the acute illness or they may come on later.
They may fluctuate over time.
And they generally across diagnostic or guidelines that have been put forth by various governance groups,
we tend to think that symptoms need to be present,
12 weeks or longer under most of those systems. There's a lot of work being done to try to
harmonize or operationalize long COVID, but it's still a fairly messy construct when you think of
diffuse symptom pictures. Some of the symptoms could be fairly prevalent among healthy adults out in the
population, things like feeling a bit fatigued, having some low mood or anxiety. We know that
there are relatively high base rates of those issues. And then these symptoms can come and go
over time. So it makes it really challenging to tease apart what is etiologically or causally related
to the COVID illness, what is related to the psychosocial stress of living through the pandemic
and having an illness. There's a lot to really tease apart. So who is most at risk for a long
COVID? Are we seeing more cases among people who are, say, older or immunocompromised, for example?
or like what about men versus women? Are there statistical differences there? So in the adult literature,
we do tend to see that our patients who are more acutely ill, meaning they required stays in the
intensive care unit. They tend to have more persistent long COVID symptoms. And we know that
that's common for almost everyone or many populations who end up in the ICU. There's an entire
literature on acute respiratory distress syndrome that tells us that being in
in the ICU, the social isolation, the proning, the ventilation, many of those factors can contribute
to long-term neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric difficulties. But more broadly, we're also
seeing long COVID symptoms in individuals who had mild or acute illnesses and who are younger.
And in those cases, you know, the risk factors that keep popping up more consistently in the
research tend to be female sex and having a history of pre-existing anxiety or depression.
Depending on how the research is conducted, we may also see various racial or ethnic backgrounds
look more or less likely to experience long COVID.
There are some studies suggesting that those with greater socioeconomic deprivation
or those who have more health core morbidities may also be at greater risk for long COVID.
And Dr. Eng, you're seeing the same thing among the younger cohort?
Yeah, we're pretty much seeing very similar risk factors.
But I think, you know, we also notice that it seems like at least one more recent study that came out,
those who are adolescents, so about 12 and above, seems to be at a little bit higher risk than younger children with on COVID.
That being said, it might be a biased reporting because young children don't have them necessarily verbal skills to report symptoms compared to school age and adolescent children.
And so I think it's the kind of a measurement issue there, you see.
Are people less likely to experience long COVID if they had a mild or a moderate case to begin with rather than severe?
And does being vaccinated have any bearing on whether you get long COVID or not?
Well, the vaccination question, there seemed to be several studies suggesting that vaccination may be associated with reduced rates of long COVID.
The data aren't entirely consistent.
and we're not exactly sure how much lower a person's risk is.
But certainly we know that avoiding COVID is going to help you avoid long COVID.
So everything that we can do to avoid getting COVID in the first place,
which includes vaccination, should be protected for long COVID as well.
So what if you've been infected with COVID once?
Does that reduce your risk for long COVID if you get infected again?
Or does it have no bearing?
And what about infection with a new strain?
I mean, there's so much stuff going on out there that we don't really have our arms around yet.
Yeah, I think there's a lot of limited literature regarding kind of like the re-infections and then the complicated sense of like thinking about other factors like vaccinations in between infections as well.
You know, I think there's a now multi-site studies like recover from the National Institute of Health trying to look at these more controlled kind of factors, thinking about these different variables.
But right now, I think there's still quite limited literature to suggest in terms of thinking about
if there's going to be different presentations or how much different presentation or how
kind of significant in terms of severity of symptoms or anything like that changes with secondary
or tertiary or third time kind of infections. There's a lot more limited kind of comparable evidence,
I think, to kind of look into that. You both see patients who come into your clinics with cognitive
concerns? What kind of symptoms are they experiencing? So from the adult side, you know, I think many
folks have heard of the term brain fog throughout this pandemic. And as a neuropsychologist, I'm not a
huge fan of the term because it lacks the type of specificity that I like to work in. But
our patients are telling us generally that they do feel cognitively sluggish or slowed. But just as often
they may say that they just feel inefficient. They can't find their words as
fluently as they previously did. They're finding that their attention is more easily pulled away from
the task at hand. They're distractible. They're no longer able to juggle multiple activities in their workday,
for example. They may be more forgetful. And so that they're frequently really bothersome and irksome
for patients that I see. Now, for patients who are more severely ill and in the ICU, we may see
patients who have had strokes or had more profound cognitive changes. But most of the patients who
are coming through my clinic tend to be those who were able to recuperate at home and did not require an
ICU stay. And so for them, it's really this sort of inefficiency and feeling like they're off
their game. And they come in wanting to get some help with strategies to improve their functioning.
And what are those strategies? I mean, how do you treat brain fog? The first thing we need to do
really assess because our patients can tell us that they feel off and they can describe the
settings and situations in which they're having difficulties. But as neuropsychologists, our role is then
to translate that into what we know about brain and behavior and assess for different types
of thinking skills to see where patients are having strengths and where their weaknesses lie.
And then we try to devise compensatory strategies to really capitalize on those areas of strength
so that we can minimize the occurrence of cognitive errors in everyday life.
We're also really focused on identifying any of the modifiable risk factors for cognitive
difficulties. So you can take COVID out of the picture. And if you're fatigued or sleeping poorly,
if you're taking cognitively compromising medicines, if you're not taking your medicines
correctly and your blood sugars are spiking and falling throughout the day,
If you have ongoing anxiety and depression, all those things can contribute to cognitive difficulties.
And so if you add on COVID, it really can be a recipe for real troubles in your everyday life.
So we want to also make sure that we're keeping an eye out for all of those things that we know we can help address
that are more behavioral in nature in terms of helping with sleep hygiene and medication adherence
and addressing mental health symptoms.
Dr. Rang, are you seeing brain fog in younger?
patients as well and how do you help them? What's the treatment? Is it the same?
We definitely also sees complaints of rain fog. And I think, I agree that I think the term,
it's kind of gray in terms of like it doesn't, it's not very specific about kind of like how it
impacts or what, what are the kind of the really kind of thinking kind of changes that they
really experience. But a lot of times it seems like from a more kind of day-to-day kind of
complaints, a lot of people are, or children and adolescents are really reporting and
kind of thinking slower, having more memories.
or learning challenges than before and feeling kind of more challenges or slower at taking
information than they used to. Generally, in terms of kind of recommendations from clinical and a lot
of times more school perspective is really kind of, again, helping more environmentally and behavioral
strategies to best support children as they kind of acclimate and kind of adjust back to the school
environment, school curriculum, and really helping them feel comfortable to kind of resume activity
rather than kind of stay away or kind of disengage from activity because it feels that
many feel so debilitating. And so, you know, I think a lot of the strategies includes like helping
like school teams really recognize like how, what does it mean to be kind of pacing the amount
of school activities and pacing amount of work and what does that mean in terms of like
each person being individually different in the amount of activity they could tolerate too.
And then thinking about kind of more kind of day to day.
Also, again, similarly, how can we support, like, sleep, like making sure that you're well hydrated,
good nutrition, things that are kind of day-to-day behavioral changes that we can do to support
good health. That could also then support good brain health. And are cognitive rehabilitative
exercises for young people different from the ones that you might use with older folks?
You know, I think a lot of, like, in terms of for us, like right now, a lot of exercises we're
really kind of supporting is also similarly kind of thinking about like cognitive
coping skills and thinking about how to manage some of the physical symptoms as well. So especially
for a lot of children who are having more like headaches, fatigue, like how to how to best manage
those symptoms. In addition to kind of thinking about more effective mood anxiety concerns that
often overlaps with a lot of physical symptoms, we think about, you know, when children are suddenly
having this increase of physical kind of concerns and physical symptoms. Of course, you know, it
impacts their day-to-day life a lot. And so that raises a lot of,
kind of anxious concerns for children as well. And so in addition to kind of thinking about
how to kind of manage some of these physical symptoms, really kind of helping them how to feel
that they can keep like keep control and some of the anxiety and some of the kind of mood and
negative kind of affective symptoms as well.
Early on in the pandemic, there was a lot of publicity about people losing their sense of
smell and taste. Is that also associated with long COVID? Are you still seeing a lot of that?
and does that also last a long time?
I think from the pediatric side, that's not as, I wouldn't say that that's really one of the top,
the more frequent symptoms that's often presented in children along COVID.
And I think we see a little bit more of, again, like the kind of more of the fatigue,
sleep issues that tends to use more a little bit prevalent among this population.
So we certainly are still seeing, even with these later waves of COVID-19,
a fair proportion of adults who are noticing changes in their sense of smell and taste.
And interestingly, it may come back for a bit and then recede again.
It appears to be recovering in fits and starts for many of the patients that I'm seeing,
which can be frustrating for them because many of us enjoy food and drink.
And having that affected can affect their quality of life.
How common are the types of specialty long COVID clinics that you work at?
how common are these clinics? Is this type of care accessible to all the people who need it,
or are they just a lucky few who get to come to you too?
From a pediatric site, I think there's not too many of these multidisciplinary kind of clinics,
but they are growing. A lot of new clinics are growing across the nation.
That being said, I think access is definitely a problem.
And I think there's multiple kind of clinical groups right now thinking about consensus,
kind of guidelines for primary health to help support kind of primary care physician.
and more to think about how to address some of these symptoms because I think there's a good
recognition that not every family may be able to see all the different types of specialists
based on where they reside, based on, you know, different kind of social economic barriers as well,
the cost and whatnot. And so I think access is definitely like one of the challenges I think
and that still kind of presents even, you know, right now years after onset of COVID.
And we're still kind of trying to figure out how can we best navigate that and help
increase access now, especially at Karen Hicke-Griguer, we have offered some of the telehealth
opportunities to make sure that some families who reside in out-of-state who may not have those
access to care can still get some access to care through digital or kind of like telehealth means.
Yeah, telehealth has been a real great side effect. It's been a real boon that we got out of the
COVID pandemic, I have to say. I couldn't agree more. I couldn't agree more the opportunity to see.
our patients in their homes, especially our patients with fatigue. It's a real barrier for them to get
into a clinic, especially sometimes at a major medical center, which tend to be located in urban
areas and might be quite a drive. But I also agree more broadly that there is a very large need
for clinical care. We're seeing specialized clinics pop up all over the country, and it's present
in most major medical centers, but there's just simply aren't enough trained
and neuropsychologist, clinical psychologist, rehab psychologist, speech language providers,
and other types of medical specialists to really handle the flow of patients who are seeking care at this point.
How much of your practice is telehealth at this point?
We actually see quite a bit about, I think, our last time we checked,
almost like half actually, the patients we see are out of state or and are seen via telehealth.
We're seeing much more now in person as like I think families are also more comfortable.
people seeing in person as well. But part of that is I think that, you know, with the multidisciplinary
clinic, with them coming in with children and teens coming in all day, getting physical examinations,
especially if they're out of state, throwing in a testing on top of that just is a lot of, in terms
of children who are already fatigued from long COVID is much more challenging for them to kind
to tolerate. And so we've kind of adapted in terms of providing some telehealth or teleneuro psychological
evaluations to make it a little bit easier for scheduling and planning for families who are coming
from out of state and who might not be able to stay longer term for our kind of multidisciplinary
clear. And most of the patients I see have also been seen first in our multidisciplinary care
clinic. And I'm not certain the proportion that are doing telemedicine versus in person for those
exams. But once they get to me, quite often I will leave it up to the patient. And less
there is something in their record that makes me feel like I need to do their exam in person.
And so some patients actually a surprising number prefer to come into the clinic and do things old
school, which is wonderful. I love seeing people face to face. But it is also the case that we've
now moved to nearly 100% of my feedback sessions when I'm going over the results and giving
guidance and talking through my findings of my exam and what I think should come next. We're using
online and virtual platforms for that almost exclusively, which has been very nice because we're able to
connect much more fluidly and patients aren't quite as stressed by having to get into the office.
So I'm wondering about some of the treatments available for physical symptoms.
It was a recent piece in the Washington Post about long COVID patients who were so desperate
for help that they were trying all kinds of unproven therapeutics, everything from
ivermectin to blood cell washing to stem cell treatments. Are you seeing this among patients who are
coming to you? And how are you treating them? Because, I mean, it sounds like people are pretty
desperate in some cases. I'm certainly aware that with the rising number of post-COVID clinics,
that there are some bad actors out there or some folks who are offering up treatments that don't
have efficacy data behind them or may not even have sort of logical mechanistic pathways for
improving patient functioning. And so, you know, I always want our patients to be speaking with
a trusted medical provider, their primary care doctor internist, if they're thinking about
going outside the mainstream. But for the most part, many of my patients, you know, are part of
this multidisciplinary care clinic. And so they're already getting good empirically based guidance
for the treatment of their symptoms. But I appreciate that there are many folks who are struggling
still and feel like they need to branch out and see whatever is out there that might help them.
So long COVID has put a spotlight on the phenomenon of post-viral illnesses, because other viruses
can cause long-term symptoms as well. How does long-term COVID compare to some of the other
post-viral conditions? I think from a symptom perspective, there's actually quite a lot of overlap.
A lot of the symptoms like fatigue, headaches, cognitive kind of kind of the brain fog or the kind of cognitive like experience changes.
A lot of those we see in a lot of post viral syndromes as well.
So, you know, I think like there is like we haven't, I think, reached to that point of really even comparing necessarily,
extending across syndromes necessarily.
But what we do see is that there's generally a similar overall presentation or at least the kind of constellations of symptoms that for him present when COVID with other.
kind of viral syndromes, too. That being said, you know, I think there's probably a little bit
difference in terms of like when we think about, we tend to see a lot more of these kind of
more milder COVID infections compared to potentially those who have more severe, like individuals
who might have been hospitalized or in the ICU might have a little bit different presentation than
the broader or the more kind of bigger sample of a long COVID, what we've seen in our
which are typically the ones without hospitalizations with more milder COVID infections.
Dr. Vernorstel, you're saying the same thing?
Yes, for the most part. I think there's a fair amount of overlap with existing viral, you know,
presentations as well as patients who have been characterized as having chronic fatigue syndrome.
Those folks, there's a lot that in pots, postural orthostatic hypotension syndrome.
There tends to be a lot of overlap in autonomic dysfunction across.
suspected ideologies. And so we're trying to figure out what is the common thread, the common
mechanistic pathways. But historically, these have been some of the hardest conditions to really
understand in terms of what are driving patient symptoms and persistence of patient symptoms.
So what are the most important research questions out there from your viewpoints?
What do clinicians need to answer really immediately in order to help patients who are struggling
with long COVID? Well, I think we need more treatment research. I'm very eager to see more treatment
outcomes research. We have some very limited data and there are a number of randomized clinical
trials for various medications that are in the works that are at various stages. But I think that
we need to be looking more. I'm a psychologist, so I love behavioral health interventions to see,
what is the effect size for the interventions that we're offering to our patients?
What are the most potent ingredients of the treatments that we're providing?
And how can we get these and package these interventions in a way that might help us
distribute them to more patients more efficiently,
since we do believe that they're likely to be helpful in terms of patient functioning and quality of life?
Dr. Eng, what are you looking for? What are the big questions?
Yeah, I think to also kind of understand,
and a lot more kind of the general COVID presentation,
if there's any kind of different subgroups in long COVID.
I think it's really important to think about kind of more controlled,
case-controlled studies and what are comparison groups,
which we don't really have in a lot of existing literature right now.
Like, a lot of these are key studies that we have.
We don't really, we haven't compared to, for example,
children who don't have COVID necessarily,
but have been experiencing all the psychosocial stressors
associated with the pandemic that we haven't had to experience many years ago.
And also thinking about those who have tested positive for COVID versus those have a clinical presentation of COVID,
meaning that you have a clinical diagnosis based on symptoms and not necessarily having tested positive for COVID.
And then third, kind of thinking about hospitalization, right, those kind of severity of COVID,
that those who have tested for COVID, those who've been hospitalized versus those who might have mild symptoms.
Well, this has been really interesting.
I want to thank you for the work that you're doing.
I know that there are a lot of people out there who need the type of help that you are providing,
and I appreciate your joining us here today to talk about the challenge of long COVID.
Could I add one thing that I often find helpful to share with patient groups?
Because I think there's so much potential for stigma surrounding long COVID symptoms,
surrounding the notion that, well, women tend to report symptoms more frequently,
or those with preexisting mental health vulnerabilities tend to report more long COVID.
And what I really want patients to appreciate is the fact that mental health and cognitive
treatments can improve functioning and quality of life does not negate the realness of a patient's
symptoms.
That dichotomy of this being, quote, unquote, all in your head versus real.
It's not a helpful one.
We know from a lot of patient populations where the etiology or cause is very obvious.
There's a stroke.
There's a brain tumor.
that mental health treatments can help reduce distress and disability and help improve quality
of life in these patients. And we have every reason to think that it will be the same for our patients
who have long COVID. So we do want to instill a degree of hope and help minimize the stigma
that may be out there. That's a great point. Thank you. And like ending on a hopeful note.
So again, thank you both for joining me today. This has been really interesting.
Thank you for having me. Thanks for having us.
You can learn more about how psychologists are contributing to the research on long COVID
in the November, December, issue of APA's magazine, The Monitor, which is on our website at
www.apa.org slash monitor. You can also find previous episodes of Speaking of Psychology on
our website at speakingof psychology.org or on Apple, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And if you like what you heard, please leave a review. If you have comments or ideas for future
you can email us at Speaking of Psychology at APA.org.
Speaking of psychology is produced by Lee Weinerman.
Our sound editor is Chris Kondyian.
Thank you for listening.
For the American Psychological Association, I'm Kim Mills.
