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Michelle Monje (neuroscientist and  neuro-oncologist Stanford University):  
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  • 00:00

    Michelle Monje (neuroscientist and  neuro-oncologist, Stanford University):  

  • 00:02

    “Inflammation in the brain can cause  dysregulation of a number of different  

  • 00:05

    cell types and have lasting consequences to  cognitive function. Understanding that when  

  • 00:11

    the pandemic struck and we saw how profoundly  immunogenic, how profoundly inflammatory  

  • 00:18

    even relatively mild cases of Covid could be, I  really worried about a neurological health crisis.  

  • 00:26

    And I think we’re watching that unfold right  now. The rates of persistent cognitive symptoms  

  • 00:33

    in people who have recovered from Covid is  

  • 00:37

    frankly alarming. We need to understand how to  intervene and offer effective therapy, or there  

  • 00:42

    are going to be just millions of people suffering  with these persistent cognitive symptoms.

  • 01:04

    “I’m not an epidemiologist. I’m not  a virologist. I’m a neurologist.  

  • 01:09

    But I am alarmed by the neurological possible  consequences of this pandemic and alarmed by  

  • 01:15

    the neurological disease that’s already  evident in many, many, many survivors of Covid.

  • 01:22

    “Even from early in the pandemic, it  was very clear to neurologists that  

  • 01:27

    Covid infection results in a remarkably high  rate of persistent neurological symptoms,  

  • 01:34

    including quite a high rate of persistent  cognitive symptoms. That includes things like  

  • 01:39

    difficulty paying attention, difficulty  with the speed of information processing,  

  • 01:44

    difficulty with concentration and memory. And  that is something that we should all be paying  

  • 01:52

    a lot of attention to — that is really, really  concerning, it’s debilitating. People are just not  

  • 01:59

    returning to their previous level of function.  And that’s a major problem with 265 million people  

  • 02:07

    worldwide infected with Covid [as of January,  2022; over 526 million cases by May, 2022], and  

  • 02:10

    some estimates of as many as 1 in 4 people,  at least prior to the time of vaccination,  

  • 02:16

    experiencing these cognitive symptoms.  This is a neurological health crisis.

  • 02:23

    “I’m a neuro-oncologist and one of my clinical  specialties is to take care of people following  

  • 02:29

    cancer therapy who have persistent brain fog:  cognitive impairment as a result of their cancer  

  • 02:36

    and its therapy. And this so-called chemo brain,  or chemo fog, is very similar to what people are  

  • 02:42

    describing after Covid. And so this so-called  Covid fog shares almost the identical symptoms.  

  • 02:50

    And what we’re finding in the laboratory is  that the two types of brain fog also share  

  • 02:56

    a lot of the very same cellular changes that we  think are underpinning this sort of fogginess.

  • 03:04

    “We know that with severe Covid infection, that  many things can go wrong, that severe disease  

  • 03:09

    is associated with blood clots that can cause  stroke with even direct infection of the brain,  

  • 03:16

    and with the consequences of multi-organ  disease and damage. But even after mild Covid,  

  • 03:23

    people were reporting persistent  cognitive trouble. And I wondered  

  • 03:27

    whether the inflammatory response  just to the respiratory infection  

  • 03:32

    might be enough to trigger neuroinflammation  — inflammation in the brain — and consequently  

  • 03:38

    dysregulate these cells that are so important to  keep in balance for healthy cognitive function.

  • 03:46

    “What we discovered in the laboratory in mice that  have relatively mild respiratory Covid and then  

  • 03:53

    in human samples, Covid elicits such a  profound inflammatory response in the brain.  

  • 04:00

    And as a result of that, brain  cells that need to work together  

  • 04:05

    in order to communicate and function normally  were dysregulated. In severe cases of Covid, there  

  • 04:13

    can be direct infection of the brain, but in many  cases, there’s no evidence of virus in the brain.

  • 04:20

    “What’s happening to affect the brain instead is  a consequence of the immune response to the virus.  

  • 04:27

    And what we studied was how the immune response  

  • 04:30

    to infection that was limited to the respiratory  system could cause inflammation in the brain  

  • 04:38

    through signaling molecules that go from the  lung, through the blood and to the brain. We found  

  • 04:45

    pretty high levels of inflammatory  molecules called cytokines and chemokines  

  • 04:51

    in the central nervous system, just  from mild respiratory infection.

  • 04:56

    “And together with that, we saw inflammation  in a particular kind of brain immune cell,  

  • 05:02

    which is called a microglia. When  microglia and astrocytes become reactive,  

  • 05:08

    they then can cause dysregulation of another  kind of glial cell that form the insulation  

  • 05:14

    around axons — quite literally like the  insulation on a wire. When that happens,  

  • 05:22

    the neurons (the communicating cells in the brain)  can’t communicate with each other in their normal  

  • 05:28

    way — not as quickly and not as well. And so that  can cause dysregulation of the whole circuit and  

  • 05:34

    cause cognitive impairment. This pathophysiology  is particularly prominent in Covid.”

  • 05:40

    Michelle Monje:  

  • 05:44

    “Now a lot more kids are becoming infected  with Covid. And so one of the next things  

  • 05:50

    we’d like to explore in the laboratory is to  understand how early life exposure to even mild  

  • 05:57

    respiratory Covid might influence both brain  development, brain plasticity and cognition.  

  • 06:05

    As a parent, as somebody who takes care  of children in the clinic, after Covid  

  • 06:12

    exposure I’m very attentive to how school is  going, to whether they’re complaining about  

  • 06:20

    not being able to remember things, if they’re  having difficulty finding their words, to describe  

  • 06:27

    certain things in conversations, their  overall level of fatigue. I think there’s  

  • 06:33

    many things to pay attention to as a  parent, as a teacher, as a physician.

  • 06:41

    “It’s not clear what neurological  diseases people may be at increased  

  • 06:46

    risk for down the road. And so it’s of  some real urgency to understand that,  

  • 06:52

    to understand these neurobiological underpinnings  of this initial response to Covid, to know  

  • 06:58

    what people may be more susceptible to, and  to reset these cells to a more normal state.

  • 07:07

    “The risk of long-term neurological disease really  gives me pause and makes me not at all ready  

  • 07:15

    to decrease mitigation efforts. I still feel that  we need to be vigilant. We need to not fatigue of  

  • 07:24

    these measures, as difficult as they are. We  need to really maximize vaccination and hope  

  • 07:33

    to minimize the long-term damage that this  pandemic is going to do for generations.

  • 07:39

    “I think the lessons from chemo brain are really  encouraging, because the biology that we uncovered  

  • 07:46

    in the context of cognitive impairment  are all potentially reversible. And that’s  

  • 07:52

    really hopeful. In more severe cases of Covid,  particularly when there are clots and strokes and  

  • 07:59

    direct brain infection, irreversible damage can  happen. But in these more mild, acute Covid cases,  

  • 08:07

    this is all potentially recoverable. It’s of  real urgency to understand the neurobiology,  

  • 08:14

    to understand the basic underpinning of what is  going wrong, so that we can develop therapies  

  • 08:20

    to intervene and restore normal balance in the  brain. Otherwise, I think that there will be  

  • 08:30

    really profound long-term consequences  of this pandemic on neurological health.”

All

The example sentences of DIFFICULTY in videos (15 in total of 330)

not adverb being verb, gerund or present participle able adjective to to remember verb, base form things noun, plural , if preposition or subordinating conjunction they personal pronoun re noun, singular or mass having verb, gerund or present participle difficulty noun, singular or mass finding verb, gerund or present participle their possessive pronoun words noun, plural , to to describe verb, base form
and coordinating conjunction difficulty noun, singular or mass getting verb, gerund or present participle accurate adjective and coordinating conjunction repeatable adjective measurement noun, singular or mass results noun, plural for preposition or subordinating conjunction chipsets proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction network noun, singular or mass equipment noun, singular or mass . . .
they personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present difficulty noun, singular or mass going verb, gerund or present participle back adverb to to sleep verb, base form they personal pronoun have verb, base form difficulty noun, singular or mass concentrating verb, gerund or present participle we personal pronoun also adverb did verb, past tense some determiner
as preposition or subordinating conjunction orthopnea noun, singular or mass - which wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present difficulty noun, singular or mass breathing noun, singular or mass when wh-adverb lying verb, gerund or present participle down adverb flat adjective since preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner allows verb, 3rd person singular present venous adjective
if preposition or subordinating conjunction they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present having verb, gerund or present participle difficulty noun, singular or mass breathing verb, gerund or present participle they personal pronoun may modal need verb, base form to to be verb, base form on preposition or subordinating conjunction oxygen noun, singular or mass to to increase verb, base form their possessive pronoun
jinn noun, singular or mass now adverb there existential there 's verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner hadith noun, singular or mass ahmed proper noun, singular that preposition or subordinating conjunction scholars noun, plural have verb, non-3rd person singular present difficulty noun, singular or mass authenticity noun, singular or mass but coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun basically adverb mentions verb, 3rd person singular present
of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner sleep noun, singular or mass episode noun, singular or mass occurs verb, 3rd person singular present later adverb than preposition or subordinating conjunction desired verb, past participle and coordinating conjunction is verb, 3rd person singular present associated verb, past participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction difficulty noun, singular or mass falling verb, gerund or present participle asleep adverb
jisoo proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present worked verb, past participle hard adjective to to improve verb, base form her possessive pronoun dancing noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction kept verb, past tense up preposition or subordinating conjunction with preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner increasing verb, gerund or present participle difficulty noun, singular or mass
the determiner difficulty noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner legal adjective perspective noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction no determiner one cardinal number at preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner point noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction time noun, singular or mass
this determiner enables verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner telescope noun, singular or mass to to gather verb, base form a determiner sufficient adjective amount noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction images noun, plural with preposition or subordinating conjunction less adjective, comparative difficulty noun, singular or mass than preposition or subordinating conjunction
did verb, past tense ok proper noun, singular now adverb you personal pronoun can modal see verb, base form here adverb sometimes adverb it personal pronoun had verb, past tense difficulty noun, singular or mass connecting verb, gerund or present participle other adjective times verb, 3rd person singular present it personal pronoun
at preposition or subordinating conjunction them personal pronoun in preposition or subordinating conjunction gujarati proper noun, singular , i personal pronoun do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb know verb, base form what wh-determiner level noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction difficulty noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present involved verb, past participle .
difficulty noun, singular or mass level noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction reading noun, singular or mass comprehension noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to give verb, base form you personal pronoun one cardinal number difficulty noun, singular or mass level noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction verbal adjective
the determiner difficulty noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present probably adverb the determiner ones noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction - you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present , that determiner affect verb, base form us personal pronoun personally adverb .
was verb, past tense enough adverb for preposition or subordinating conjunction mining noun, singular or mass bitcoin proper noun, singular back adverb in preposition or subordinating conjunction 2009 cardinal number since preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner mining noun, singular or mass difficulty noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense low adjective .

Use "difficulty" in a sentence | "difficulty" example sentences

How to use "difficulty" in a sentence?

  • Technological society has succeeded in multiplying the opportunities for pleasure, but it has great difficulty in generating joy.
    -Pope Paul VI-
  • It is worth remembering that the time of greatest gain in terms of wisdom and inner strength is often that of greatest difficulty.
    -Dalai Lama-
  • The condition for a miracle is difficulty, however the condition for a great miracle is not difficulty, but impossibility.
    -Angus Buchan-
  • We are always in a hurry to be happy...; for when we have suffered a long time, we have great difficulty in believing in good fortune.
    -Alexandre Dumas-
  • Spend 5 minutes breathing in, cherishing yourself; and, breathing out cherishing others. If you think about people you have difficulty cherishing, extend your cherishing to them anyway.
    -Dalai Lama-
  • Difficulty on the way to victory is opportunity for God to work
    -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow-
  • But the gravest difficulty, and perhaps the most important, in poetry meant solely for recitation, is the difficulty of achieving verbal beauty, or rather of making verbal beauty tell.
    -Lascelles Abercrombie-
  • Hope - Hope in the face of difficulty. Hope in the face of uncertainty. The audacity of hope!
    -Barack Obama-

Definition and meaning of DIFFICULTY

What does "difficulty mean?"

/ˈdifəkəltē/

noun
Something that is hard to do.

What are synonyms of "difficulty"?
Some common synonyms of "difficulty" are:
  • strain,
  • struggling,
  • awkwardness,
  • trouble,
  • toil,
  • labor,
  • laboriousness,
  • strenuousness,
  • arduousness,
  • pains,
  • problems,
  • hassle,
  • stress,
  • dolor,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "difficulty"?
Some common antonyms of "difficulty" are:
  • ease,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.