Imagine being young and
healthy, a nonsmoker with no preexisting health conditions, and then waking up
one morning feeling like you were being suffocated by an unseen force. Back in
March, this was my reality.
I had just returned from
Europe, and roughly 10 days later started having flu-like symptoms. I
became weak
overnight and had trouble breathing. It felt like jogging in
the Rocky Mountains without being in condition, only I wasn’t moving. I went to
the hospital, where I was tested for COVID-19.
I was one of the first
people in Texas given a non-FDA-approved test. My results came back negative.
As a social
epidemiologist who deals with big data, I was certain it was
a false
negative.
More than four months
later, the symptoms have not gone away. My heart still races even though I am
resting. I cannot stay in the sun for long periods; it zaps all of my energy. I
have gastrointestinal problems, ringing in the ears and chest pain.
I’m what’s known as a
long-hauler – part of a growing group of people who have COVID-19 and have
never fully recovered. Fatigue is one of the most common persistent symptoms,
but there are many others, including the cognitive effects people often
describe as brain fog. As more patients face these persistent symptoms,
employers will have to find ways to work with them. It’s too soon to say we’re
disabled, but it’s also too soon to know how long the damage will last.
The frustration of not
knowing
What made matters worse
in the beginning was that my doctors were not certain I had COVID-19. My test
was negative and I had no fever, so my symptoms did not fit into early descriptions of the disease. Instead, I was
diagnosed with a respiratory illness, prescribed the Z-pack antibiotic and a
low dosage of an anti-inflammatory medication normally used for arthritis
patients.
A Yale
study released in May shows COVID-19 deaths in America do not
reflect the pandemic’s true mortality rate. If I had died at home, my death
would not have been counted as COVID-19.
By the end of March, I was on the road to recovery. Then I had a
seizure. In the ER, the doctor said I had COVID-19 and that I was lucky – tests
showed my organs did not have lasting damage. After the seizure, I lay in my
bedroom for weeks with the curtains drawn, because light and sound had started
to hurt.
The search for answers
I did not understand why I was not recovering. I began searching
for answers online. I found a support group for people struggling with COVID-19
long-term. They called themselves long-haulers.
COVID-19 support groups show that there are many people not
considered sick enough to be hospitalized – yet they are experiencing symptoms
worse than the flu. It is possible COVID-19 is neurotoxic and
is one of the first illnesses capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier. This
might explain why many people like me have neurological
problems. Many long-haulers are experiencing post-viral symptoms similar to
those caused by mononucleosis and myalgicencephalomyelitis/chronic
fatigue syndrome.
A common frustration is that some medical doctors dismiss their complaints as
psychological.
One woman in the support group wrote: “140 days later, so many
are hard to breathe, and no doctors will take me seriously as I was diagnosed
with a negative swab and negative antibodies.”
Paul Garner was the first epidemiologist to publicly share his
COVID status. He described his 7-week fight with the coronavirus in a blog post for the British medical
journal The BMJ. In July, I was interviewed by ABC. That month, an Indiana
University researcher working with an online community of long-haulers released
a report identifying over 100 symptoms, and the CDC expanded its list of characteristics that
put people at greater risk of developing severe COVID-19 symptoms. On July 31,
the CDC also acknowledged that young people with no prior medical issues can
experience long-term symptoms.
It’s still unclear why COVID-19 impacts some people more
severely than others. Emerging evidence
suggests blood type might play a role. However, data
are mixed.
A Dutch study found immune cells TLR7 –
Toll-like receptor 7 located on the X chromosome – which is needed to detect
the virus is not operating properly in some patients. This allows COVID-19 to
move unchecked by the immune system. Men do not have an extra X chromosome to
rely on, suggesting that men, rather than women, may experience more severe
COVID-19 symptoms.
Many COVID-19 survivors report having no antibodies for SARS-CoV-2. Antibody
tests have a low accuracy rate, and data from Sweden suggest
T-cell responses might be more important for immunity. Emerging evidence found
CD4 and CD8 memory T-cell response in some people recovered from COVID-19,
regardless of whether antibodies were present. A
La Jolla Institute for Immunity study identified
SARS-CoV-2-specific memory T-cell responses in some people who were not exposed
to COVID-19, which might explain why some people get sicker than others. The
complete role of T-cell response is unknown, but recent
data are promising.
Looking ahead in an
economy of long-haulers
Like many long-haulers, my goal is to resume a normal life.
I still grapple with a host of post-viral issues, including
extreme fatigue, brain fog and headaches. I spend the majority of my day
resting.
A big challenge long-haulers face may be sustaining employment.
Ultimately, it is too early to classify long-haulers as having a disability.
Anthony Fauci reported that “it will take months
to a year or more to know whether lingering COVID-19 symptoms in young people
could be chronic illnesses.”
Economics is a big driver of health, and the link between employment and health care in America further
exacerbates the need to maintain employment to protect health. Employers need
to be ready to make accommodations to keep long-haulers working. The stress of
being sick long-term, combined with the possibility of job loss, can also
contribute to mental health issues.
To effectively fight COVID-19 and understand the risks, these
patients with continuing symptoms must be studied.
Online support groups, meanwhile, are helping long-haulers feel understood.
(The Conversation).
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