Para-infectious brain injury in COVID-19 persists at follow-up despite attenuated cytokine and autoantibody responses

Benedict D. Michael*, Cordelia Dunai, Edward J. Needham, Kukatharmini Tharmaratnam, Robyn Williams, Yun Huang, Sarah A. Boardman, Jordan J. Clark, Parul Sharma, Krishanthi Subramaniam, Greta K. Wood, Ceryce Collie, Richard Digby, Alexander Ren, Emma Norton, Maya Leibowitz, Soraya Ebrahimi, Andrew Fower, Hannah Fox, Esteban TatoMark A. Ellul, Geraint Sunderland, Marie Held, Claire Hetherington, Franklyn N. Egbe, Alish Palmos, Kathy Stirrups, Alexander Grundmann, Anne-Cecile Chiollaz, Jean-Charles Sanchez, James P. Stewart, Michael Griffiths, Tom Solomon, Gerome Breen, Alasdair J. Coles, Nathalie Kingston, John R. Bradley, Patrick F. Chinnery, Jonathan Cavanagh, Sarosh R. Irani, Angela Vincent, J. Kenneth Baillie, Peter J. Openshaw, Malcolm G. Semple, ISARIC4C Investigators, Tassos Grammatikopoulos, Marlies Ostermann, COVID-CNS Consortium, Alex Dregan, Alish Palmos, Ammar Al-Chalabi, Anthony S. David, Fernando Zelaya, Henry C. Rogers, Matthew Hotopf, Michael P. Lunn, Monika Hartmann, Silvia Rota, Simon Keller, Leonie S. Taams, David K. Menon

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Medicine and Dentistry

Immunology and Microbiology

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