Infected in the first wave, they navigated long COVID without a roadmap
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[February 20, 2023]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - When COVID-19 hit in 2020, Ghenya Grondin of
Waltham, Massachusetts, was a postpartum doula - a person charged with
helping young couples navigate the first weeks of their newborn child's
life at home.
Grondin, now aged 44, was infected with SARS-CoV-2 in mid-March of that
year - before there were tests, before social distancing or masks, and
many months before the medical community recognized long COVID as a
complication of COVID-19.
She is part of a community of first-wave long-haulers who faced a new
disease without a roadmap or support from the medical establishment.
Three years later, at least 65 million people worldwide are estimated to
have long COVID, according to an evidence review published last month in
Nature Reviews Microbiology. More than 200 symptoms have been linked to
the syndrome - including extreme fatigue, difficulty thinking,
headaches, dizziness when standing, sleep problems, chest pain, blood
clots, immune dysregulation, and even diabetes.
There are no proven treatments but research is underway.
People infected later in the pandemic had the benefit of vaccination,
which "protects at least to some degree" from long COVID, said Dr. Bruce
Levy, a Harvard pulmonologist and a co-principal investigator of the
National Institute of Health's $1.15 billion U.S. RECOVER trial, which
aims to characterize and find cures for the disease.
"The initial variant of the virus caused a more severe illness than
we're seeing currently in most patients," he said.
According to the University of Washington's Institute of Health Metrics
and Evaluation, in the first two years of the pandemic women were twice
as likely as men to develop long COVID, and 15% of all of those affected
at three months continued to experience symptoms beyond 12 months.
An analysis of thousands of health records by the RECOVER trial found
that non-Hispanic white women in wealthier areas were more likely than
others to have a long COVID diagnosis. Researchers said that likely
reflected disparities in access to healthcare, and suggests that many
cases of long COVID among people of color are not being diagnosed.
Grondin grew concerned when she continued to have symptoms three months
after her initial infection - but there was no name for it then.
"I just kept saying to my husband, something isn't right," she said.
Like her fellow long-haulers, she has experienced a host of symptoms,
including fatigue, sleep apnea, pain, cognitive dysfunction, and in her
case, a brain aneurysm. She described a frightening moment when she was
driving a car with her toddler in the back and had a seizure that left
her in the path of oncoming traffic.
She has since been diagnosed with long COVID and can no longer work.
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Genie Stevens, who first was sick with
COVID-19 in March 2020, meditates, which has helped her manage and
improve her long COVID symptoms, at her home in Falmouth,
Massachusetts, U.S., October 17, 2022. Stevens says, “COVID-19
transformed my life. I would not choose the horror of COVID again,
but the journey has been rich.” REUTERS/Brian Snyder
"It just feels like a constant punch
in the face," said Grondin.
Scientists are still working out why some people infected with COVID
develop long-term symptoms, but syndromes like this are not new.
Other infections such as Lyme disease can result in long-term
symptoms, many of which overlap with long COVID.
Leading theories of the root causes of long COVID include the virus
or viral proteins remaining in the tissues of some individuals; the
infection causing an autoimmune response; or the virus reactivating
latent viruses, leading to inflammation that damages tissue.
Kate Porter, 38, of Beverly, Massachusetts, a project manager for a
financial services company, believes she was infected on a flight
back from Florida in late March of 2020.
She had daily fevers for seven months, muscle weakness, shortness of
breath, and excruciating nerve pain.
"I don't think people realize how brutal physically everything was,"
she said. In one of her darker moments, Porter recalled, "I cried on
the floor begging for something to take me peacefully. I've never
been like that."
Frustrated by the lack of answers from a list of 10 specialists she
has seen, Porter has explored alternative medicine. "It has opened
me up to other remedies," she said.
Although her health is much improved now, she still suffers from
near daily migraines and neck pain she fears may never go away.
Genie Stevens, 65, a director of climate education, got infected
while traveling from her home in Santa Fe to Cape Cod in late March
2020 to visit her mother, and never left. "It completely upended my
life," she said.
She went to an emergency department seeking tests and was told there
were none - the typical answer in the spring of 2020, when
scientists were scrambling to understand the nature of the virus and
tests were being rationed. She was sent home to manage on her own.
A lifelong practitioner of meditation, Stevens took solace there,
finding it eased her symptoms.
Confined to her bed that spring, she focused on an ancient crabapple
tree outside her room. "I watched every bud unfurl."
Although largely recovered, Stevens still has flare-ups of brain
fog, exhaustion and high-pitched ringing in her ears when she pushes
too hard. "This is the astoundingly maddening part of the illness. I
feel totally fine, and then bam."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; editing by Caroline Humer and
Rosalba O'Brien)
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