Posted on 02/13/2022 3:03:52 PM PST by bitt
Long COVID is a chronic condition when patients have persistent symptoms that extend beyond the typical time frame
Two healthy middle-aged females returned to almost their normal daily activities after taking daily antihistamines for long COVID, according to a recently published case report.
The researchers noted long COVID is a chronic condition when patients who are infected with the virus have persistent symptoms that extend beyond the typical time frame for the infection to resolve, but the illness currently doesn’t have any evidence-based treatments to guide how to manage it.
"Most patients tell us that providers have not recommended anything that has helped," said co-author Melissa Pinto, associate professor at the University of California, Irvine Sue and Bill Gross School of Nursing.
The report describes the first case of a White woman in her 40s with a past medical history of Raynaud's phenomenon (a condition where there is decreased blood flow to the fingers), polycystic ovarian syndrome (a hormonal disorder of the ovaries), and a milk allergy.
She is likely one of the first known people to be infected with COVID-19 in the United States, according to ScienceAlert.
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(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
Coworker got multiple Jim Jones Jabs, has trouble breathing, and anti-histamines aren't doing zip. It's more than a month with Omicron for her and it's not getting better.
Lemon drops work and taste better
Will have to try those. I’ve used cherry Luden’s for years.
Lemon breaks up the phlegm accumulation. Butterscotch soothe raw and scratchiness etc.
Got it
Q: Were people with so-called long COVID given early treatment? Any treatment?
If not, perhaps Ivermectin might be more efficacious.
Tried it
For me it was before the shots came out, for the other person’s case it was Omicron. She’s happily sailing along eating spicy food and its only been a month or so for her. For me, I was a bit afraid that this was my new normal as I kept rolling along with Covid symptoms for 9-10 months before I finally got the Pfizer jab. OTC just wasn’t cutting it.
I was going with shortness of breath that could only be alleviated by duoneb for 9-10 months. It was pretty much a sea change for me having the shot vs not having the shot.
I take benadryl nightly for chronic insomnia. When I had covid, I did had lingering fatigue and weakness, but I had those issues preinfection. I’m now back at baseline, not that baseline was so hot to begin with
Just google it - there’s a number of articles out there. Here’s one -
https://health.clevelandclinic.org/do-certain-medications-increase-dementia-risk/
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