In people with neurological long COVID, infection is followed by a significant increase in pTau-181, and in a subset this is accompanied by changes in amyloid markers!
This biomarker pattern is compatible with tau-related pathology and may point to a worse long-term prognosis🧵
A new prospective study in eBioMedicine followed 227 individuals with blood samples collected before and after COVID-19.
That matters - this isn’t a cross-sectional snapshot, but a true within-person biological change after infection.
The focus was neurological PASC (N-PASC). Persistent symptoms like brain fog, loss of smell/taste, dizziness, balance problems, behavioral changes.
Only this group showed a marked post-COVID rise in pTau-181!
On average, pTau-181 increased by ~59% compared to pre-infection levels (sic)
Controls (no COVID or COVID without N-PASC) did not show this pattern.
Crucially, the increase was strongest in people whose neurological symptoms persisted longer than 1.5 years.
That argues against a short-lived inflammatory after effect and toward a time dependent biological process.
More than half of N-PASC patients showed ≥20% increases in pTau-181.
Nearly 45% crossed thresholds commonly used in Alzheimer’s disease research (sic)
The study does not say this is Alzheimer’s - but it does signal a concerning biomarker shift.
In a subset, elevated pTau-181 coincided with changes in amyloid markers (Aβ40/42).
Together, this combination is typically associated with tau-related neurodegenerative pathways.
Sum:
Neurological long COVID should not be dismissed as purely functional or transient. Study shows that in a subset of neurological long COVID patients, biology shifts in a direction compatible with tau-pathology, and that the signal grows with time.
Yang at al., Increased phosphorylated tau (pTau-181) is associated with neurological post-acute sequelae of coronavirus disease in essential workers: a prospective cohort study before and after COVID-19 onset. eBioMedicine 2026. thelancet.com/journals/ebiom…
Why this matters for working-age adults?
Brain fog, attention lapses, dizziness and tinnitus directly affect safety, productivity, and employability.
This study suggests these symptoms can have an objective biological correlate, not just subjective distress.
Why this matters for children?
Children have decades ahead of them. Even subtle post-infectious neurobiological shifts could compound over time.
This study is in adults - but it raises urgent questions about pediatric long COVID and long-term brain health.
@szupraha @ZdravkoOnline @adamvojtech86
Why this matters for prevention?
If some post-COVID neurological syndromes involve progressive tau-related processes, then preventing infection isn’t just about avoiding acute illness -
it may also be about preventing long-term neurological risk.
PET studies in long COVID show persistent neuroinflammation and microglial activation.
BBB studies show vascular and barrier dysfunction.
Activated microglia are known to promote tau phosphorylation.
This biomarker signal fits into that broader picture - it doesn’t stand alone.
In HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND), the role of microglial activation and blood–brain barrier dysfunction in long-term cognitive symptoms has been recognized for years.
In long COVID, a pTau-181/amyloid signal is emerging in a subset of neurological PASC patients. This is not about functional symptoms, but long-term neurobiology.
When post-COVID neurological syndromes show signals compatible with long-term neurobiology, minimizing repeated infection becomes a public health responsibility - not a personal preference.
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Four years after infection, most people treated for long COVID in a specialist clinic still hadn’t returned to their previous level of health🧵
This prospective cohort study followed 3,590 people with long COVID for up to four years in a specialist post-COVID clinic in London.
Most patients were not hospitalised during their acute infection, the majority were working-age adults, and nearly two-thirds were women.
The most common symptoms were
fatigue (80%)
breathlessness (68%)
brain fog (54%)
muscle pain, sleep disturbance, and autonomic symptoms
Patients typically reported multiple symptoms at once (median = five).
Severe COVID doesn’t end with a negative test.
In the worst cases, we see epigenetic rewiring of genes that control mitochondria - the cell’s energy system. And once that switch flips, it doesn’t always flip back🧵
This isn’t a random epigenetic signal.
The changes concentrate in promoters of genes controlling respiratory chain complexes I and IV - the core machinery that turns oxygen and nutrients into usable energy (ATP).
Complex I is especially critical.
It’s the main entry point for electrons into mitochondrial respiration.
When its regulation is disturbed, cells make less ATP and more oxidative stress - a combination that accelerates cellular failure.
A new study in Journal of Clinical Medicine shows that after COVID-19, many patients have persistent impairment of oxygen transfer in the lungs (DLCO/KCO) - lasting 12 to 22 months, even when basic spirometry looks almost normal🧵
Key point?
FEV1 remains largely stable, while FVC improves only slowly over time.
This doesn’t look like classic airway obstruction. It points instead to restrictive and diffusion-level damage.
In simple terms.
Patients may breathe fine on spirometry, yet oxygen doesn’t pass efficiently from the lungs into the blood.
One of the strongest - and most concerning - studies so far. A true before/after design, a clear tau signal in persistent neurological symptoms, and nearly half exceeding Alzheimer’s research pTau-181 thresholds🧵
Related evidence. A large UK Biobank longitudinal analysis in Nature Medicine - Duff et al., 2025 -compared plasma Alzheimer’s-related biomarkers before vs after SARS-CoV-2 infection (with matched controls).
They found that SARS-CoV-2 infection was associated with a shift toward an AD-like biomarker profile - notably a reduced plasma Aβ42:Aβ40 ratio, and in more vulnerable participants lower Aβ42 and higher pTau-181.
For years, Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) has been linked to multiple sclerosis.
The association was strong.
But the mechanism remained frustratingly abstract - until now.🧵
This new paper in Cell (2026) finally does what’s been missing.
It doesn’t just connect EBV and MS statistically -
it shows how the immune system gets it wrong.
Instead of focusing on antibodies, the authors look at CD4+ T cells.
Long-lived memory cells.
The ones that shape immune behavior over decades.
People with Long COVID often describe brain fog, mental fatigue, slowed thinking.
For a long time, we lacked direct biological evidence that something measurable was wrong in the brain.
Now we have one🧵
This new study used 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Unlike standard MRI, it doesn’t look at brain structure - it looks at cellular energy metabolism.
Specifically, it measures the balance between
ATP, the cell’s immediate energy currency
phosphocreatine (PCr), a fast energy reserve - basically a buffer/backup battery