date: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.7 pdf:docinfo:title: Brain Mechanisms of COVID-19-Sleep Disorders xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref dc:description: 2020 and 2021 have been unprecedented years due to the rapid spread of the modified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus around the world. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes atypical infiltrated pneumonia with many neurological symptoms, and major sleep changes. The exposure of people to stress, such as social confinement and changes in daily routines, is accompanied by various sleep disturbances, known as ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. Sleep disorders induce neuroinflammation, which promotes the blood?brain barrier (BBB) disruption and entry of antigens and inflammatory factors into the brain. Here, we review findings and trends in sleep research in 2020?2021, demonstrating how COVID-19 and sleep disorders can induce BBB leakage via neuroinflammation, which might contribute to the ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. The new studies suggest that the control of sleep hygiene and quality should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients. We also discuss perspective strategies for the prevention of COVID-19-related BBB disorders. We demonstrate that sleep might be a novel biomarker of BBB leakage, and the analysis of sleep EEG patterns can be a breakthrough non-invasive technology for diagnosis of the COVID-19-caused BBB disruption. Keywords: COVID-19-sleep disorders; brain mechanisms; the blood?brain barrier permeability access_permission:modify_annotations: true access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: 2020 and 2021 have been unprecedented years due to the rapid spread of the modified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus around the world. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes atypical infiltrated pneumonia with many neurological symptoms, and major sleep changes. The exposure of people to stress, such as social confinement and changes in daily routines, is accompanied by various sleep disturbances, known as ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. Sleep disorders induce neuroinflammation, which promotes the blood?brain barrier (BBB) disruption and entry of antigens and inflammatory factors into the brain. Here, we review findings and trends in sleep research in 2020?2021, demonstrating how COVID-19 and sleep disorders can induce BBB leakage via neuroinflammation, which might contribute to the ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. The new studies suggest that the control of sleep hygiene and quality should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients. We also discuss perspective strategies for the prevention of COVID-19-related BBB disorders. We demonstrate that sleep might be a novel biomarker of BBB leakage, and the analysis of sleep EEG patterns can be a breakthrough non-invasive technology for diagnosis of the COVID-19-caused BBB disruption. dc:creator: Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya, Aysel Mamedova, Valeria Vinnik, Maria Klimova, Elena Saranceva, Vasily Ageev, Tingting Yu, Dan Zhu, Thomas Penzel and Jürgen Kurths description: 2020 and 2021 have been unprecedented years due to the rapid spread of the modified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus around the world. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes atypical infiltrated pneumonia with many neurological symptoms, and major sleep changes. The exposure of people to stress, such as social confinement and changes in daily routines, is accompanied by various sleep disturbances, known as ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. Sleep disorders induce neuroinflammation, which promotes the blood?brain barrier (BBB) disruption and entry of antigens and inflammatory factors into the brain. Here, we review findings and trends in sleep research in 2020?2021, demonstrating how COVID-19 and sleep disorders can induce BBB leakage via neuroinflammation, which might contribute to the ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. The new studies suggest that the control of sleep hygiene and quality should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients. We also discuss perspective strategies for the prevention of COVID-19-related BBB disorders. We demonstrate that sleep might be a novel biomarker of BBB leakage, and the analysis of sleep EEG patterns can be a breakthrough non-invasive technology for diagnosis of the COVID-19-caused BBB disruption. dcterms:created: 2021-06-28T04:25:26Z Last-Modified: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z dcterms:modified: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.7 title: Brain Mechanisms of COVID-19-Sleep Disorders xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:a5763e0e-6e8a-4beb-868c-e26d874531e0 Last-Save-Date: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:docinfo:keywords: COVID-19-sleep disorders; brain mechanisms; the blood?brain barrier permeability pdf:docinfo:modified: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z meta:save-date: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Brain Mechanisms of COVID-19-Sleep Disorders modified: 2021-12-15T13:22:41Z cp:subject: 2020 and 2021 have been unprecedented years due to the rapid spread of the modified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus around the world. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes atypical infiltrated pneumonia with many neurological symptoms, and major sleep changes. The exposure of people to stress, such as social confinement and changes in daily routines, is accompanied by various sleep disturbances, known as ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. Sleep disorders induce neuroinflammation, which promotes the blood?brain barrier (BBB) disruption and entry of antigens and inflammatory factors into the brain. Here, we review findings and trends in sleep research in 2020?2021, demonstrating how COVID-19 and sleep disorders can induce BBB leakage via neuroinflammation, which might contribute to the ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. The new studies suggest that the control of sleep hygiene and quality should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients. We also discuss perspective strategies for the prevention of COVID-19-related BBB disorders. We demonstrate that sleep might be a novel biomarker of BBB leakage, and the analysis of sleep EEG patterns can be a breakthrough non-invasive technology for diagnosis of the COVID-19-caused BBB disruption. pdf:docinfo:subject: 2020 and 2021 have been unprecedented years due to the rapid spread of the modified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus around the world. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes atypical infiltrated pneumonia with many neurological symptoms, and major sleep changes. The exposure of people to stress, such as social confinement and changes in daily routines, is accompanied by various sleep disturbances, known as ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. Sleep disorders induce neuroinflammation, which promotes the blood?brain barrier (BBB) disruption and entry of antigens and inflammatory factors into the brain. Here, we review findings and trends in sleep research in 2020?2021, demonstrating how COVID-19 and sleep disorders can induce BBB leakage via neuroinflammation, which might contribute to the ?coronasomnia? phenomenon. The new studies suggest that the control of sleep hygiene and quality should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients. We also discuss perspective strategies for the prevention of COVID-19-related BBB disorders. We demonstrate that sleep might be a novel biomarker of BBB leakage, and the analysis of sleep EEG patterns can be a breakthrough non-invasive technology for diagnosis of the COVID-19-caused BBB disruption. Content-Type: application/pdf pdf:docinfo:creator: Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya, Aysel Mamedova, Valeria Vinnik, Maria Klimova, Elena Saranceva, Vasily Ageev, Tingting Yu, Dan Zhu, Thomas Penzel and Jürgen Kurths X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya, Aysel Mamedova, Valeria Vinnik, Maria Klimova, Elena Saranceva, Vasily Ageev, Tingting Yu, Dan Zhu, Thomas Penzel and Jürgen Kurths meta:author: Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya, Aysel Mamedova, Valeria Vinnik, Maria Klimova, Elena Saranceva, Vasily Ageev, Tingting Yu, Dan Zhu, Thomas Penzel and Jürgen Kurths dc:subject: COVID-19-sleep disorders; brain mechanisms; the blood?brain barrier permeability meta:creation-date: 2021-06-28T04:25:26Z created: Mon Jun 28 06:25:26 CEST 2021 access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 21 Creation-Date: 2021-06-28T04:25:26Z access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: COVID-19-sleep disorders; brain mechanisms; the blood?brain barrier permeability Author: Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya, Aysel Mamedova, Valeria Vinnik, Maria Klimova, Elena Saranceva, Vasily Ageev, Tingting Yu, Dan Zhu, Thomas Penzel and Jürgen Kurths producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 pdf:docinfo:created: 2021-06-28T04:25:26Z