# Neurological symptoms and physical exam findings 6–11 months post-COVID-19: a cohort study

**Authors:** Bruno Fukelmann Guedes, Ana Paula Ritto, Andre Macedo Serafim Silva, Antonio Edvan Camelo Filho, Cristiane de Araújo Martins Moreno, Marcos Vinícius Oliveira Marques, Mariana Ribeiro Marcondes da Silveira, Raphael de Luca eTuma, José Pedro Soares Baima, Sâmia Yasin Wayhs, Rodrigo de Holanda Mendonça, Cristiana Borges Pereira, Bruno Diógenes Iepsen, Barbara Leite Costa, Emanuelle Roberta da Silva Aquino, Julia Chartouni Rodrigues, Geraldo Busatto Filho, Edmar Zanoteli, Suely Kazue Nagahashi Marie, Ricardo Nitrini, Luiz Henrique Martins Castro

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-33779-w · 2026-01-02

## TL;DR

This study finds that neurological issues like muscle weakness and gait problems are common in COVID-19 survivors months after hospitalization.

## Contribution

The study introduces a simplified neurological screening model for efficient post-COVID triage.

## Key findings

- Muscle weakness, gait impairment, and paresthesias were the most frequent symptoms 6–11 months post-COVID-19.
- Diabetes was associated with gait impairment and paresthesias, and longer hospital stays predicted all three symptoms.
- A simplified screening model using five items from the WHO protocol was effective for neurological triage.

## Abstract

Somatic neurological complications are an underexplored component of post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection. We evaluated long-term somatic neurological symptoms, examination findings, and suspected diagnoses among adults hospitalized for COVID-19. A total of 708 survivors were assessed 6–11 months after discharge using a structured three-step neurological evaluation based on the World Health Organization Protocol for Epidemiologic Studies of Neurologic Disorders: an adapted symptom questionnaire, a brief standardized neurological examination, and a full neurological consult. Muscle weakness, gait impairment, and paresthesias remained the most frequent symptoms at follow-up. Longer hospital stay predicted all three symptoms, and diabetes was associated with both gait impairment and paresthesias. Common examination findings included monoparesis, hemiparesis, and gradient-pattern sensory loss. Clinically suspected diagnoses included neuromuscular disease in 26%, cerebrovascular disease in 10%, and epilepsy in only 2.7% of cases. Logistic regression linked neuromuscular disease to paresthesias and tandem-walk failure, cerebrovascular disease to facial paralysis, and epilepsy to loss-of-contact episodes. A simplified screening model derived through best-subsets selection identified five informative items from the WHO protocol: paresthesias, facial paralysis, tandem walk, index–nose test, and loss-of-contact episodes. These findings indicate that somatic neurological abnormalities remain frequent months after severe COVID-19 and that a brief bedside subset may support efficient post-COVID neurological triage.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-025-33779-w.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** diabetes (MONDO:0005015), neuromuscular disease (MONDO:0019056), cerebrovascular disease (MONDO:0011057), epilepsy (MONDO:0005027)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12852936