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How long did you feel ill with the virus
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Tested positive 16th December felt unwell for 24hrs the day prior. Developed and still have a cough ever since although it's starting to get better finally |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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Funny how it affects people differently. I just heard from my parents and my mother is getting better but my father hasn't been out of bed for over a week and doesn't seem to be getting any better not eating. |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu "
I was poorly for around a week the first time.
A little bit flu like the second time but wouldn’t have been off work usually (obviously was as it was covid)
Some people have low stats for months afterwards. So scary x |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I’ve not had the virus ....fingers crossed i don’t get it.
This picture is giving me another fever "
Had a small cough. Tested positive on a Monday. Poleaxed by Wednesday. That was beginning of Jan
Noy back at work yet..still fucked |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"The fatigue was fucking weird. Unlike anything I've ever had before. Random and strange feeling."
Its awful.. 10 min walks taking almost an hour. Think i have sat on every wall in the area getting my breath back |
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By *ocbigMan
over a year ago
Birmingham |
Ran 20k Sunday, coughing at bedtime, coughed a bit Mon, tested Tuesday, felt like I had a hangover & would happily sleep in until 10ish (usually 8-8.30 if not at work). Developed a rash & felt generally crap for a week or so. Did run walk run almost a week after isolation ended & increased distance to half marathon by third week. |
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By *ez1987Man
over a year ago
Great Harwood, Blackburn |
I had it start of the month.
Started with a persistent headache that would not go away.
Next day I had a temp of 39 and my Sat's where 88.
The cough came late on at night the 2nd day.
Mainly exhausted and wanting to sleep all day.
Had ab altered taste but could smell fine.
Took about a week to recover but only having paracetamol and lemsips.
Hopefully work will book me in for my jabs mid march. |
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"I’ve not had the virus ....fingers crossed i don’t get it.
This picture is giving me another fever
Had a small cough. Tested positive on a Monday. Poleaxed by Wednesday. That was beginning of Jan
Noy back at work yet..still fucked"
But it dose sound like you new you had it early so did not transmit it to others that is also so important. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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About 10 days of sweats and not sleeping....short of breath if I did anything strenuous. After that about a week of gradual improvement off work for 3 weeks in total.
Actually diagnosed with double pneumonia but refused to go hospital against doctor's advice.
Got my first jab on Monday as my surgery are well ahead.... |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Back in February 2019 I spent the day as normal, cooking and eating my evening meal. Around 9:00pm I started to feel unwell, and at about 9:30 I literally crawled up the stairs to bed. Once in bed I couldn't stop shivering, and the next morning the bedsheet was soaked from sweat. I felt awful, over the next few days a raking cough developed, I couldn't smell or taste anything, the only thing I could keep down was water. I couldn't even face food and over the next 10 days I lost 1.5 stone in weight. The cough developed into a chesty cough, and I was coughing up a thick brown mucus. I had difficulty breathing especially at night, at times I felt like I was drowning, it was a good three weeks more before I well enough to make a Dr's appointment, I didn't have the energy to walk to the surgery at the bottom of the road until then. The Dr examined me and said it was a virus and there was nothing he could give me, it would have to run its course (COVID19 wasn't identified then). It took another good 3 weeks ater that before I began to feel better. I'm convinced I had COVID then but as I said, it wasn't heard of then, so it was "just a virus". |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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I reckon I had it in july 2019.
Fever, headache, felt like I had a cold and felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest. Ended up in hospital on oxygen and they hadn't a clue what I had.
Lasted 8 days and fatigue for about 6-8 weeks after. |
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Felt unwell mid October, just a bit of a sore throat so went and got a test. Felt fine the next day and got the test result back on the 17th..I couldn't believe it was positive but thought I must be asymptomatic so thank the maker I got a test..
But bugger me, a day later the effects really started and lasted for a few days; cough, feeling crap..by the next weekend I felt fine again.
Thinking it was all over was a huge mistake, the following Monday I felt worse than ever and this went on for weeks.
Every joint in my body hurt, all my muscles ached constantly, near permanent headaches and feeling totally drained.
My lungs and my kidneys hurt and I could feel them inside me..
This went on for weeks and in November I ended in hospital unable to breathe properly.
If that wasn't bad enough, the brain fog was just really annoying. Unable to remember words and names of things or people.
By Christmas, i was over the worst of it and just really had the aches and chest pains left (and the funking brain fog!), they have slowly got less but I still have them now.
The chest pains come and go but mainly feel like having broken ribs and my knees and ankles swell if I walk or stand for too long..
On a plus side, I have totally lost my sense of smell so cannot smell when the cat craps in the litter tray..
Well, every cloud has a silver lining..
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??"
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??"
That’s because we’ve worn masks, social distanced upped the hygiene and had a large uptake of the flu vaccine. Makes you think we should take these precautions every flu season like they do in Asian countries |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
Why do you think that could be? "
What do you think? |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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I don't get how some people have it for longer than others and so many people getting affected in different ways with it.
Myself and my parents have it and we have all had a different reaction with it. I know things can depend on people's immune system but this seems to be different from other viruses where with the flu you know what you are going to get but not with this.
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"I don't get how some people have it for longer than others and so many people getting affected in different ways with it.
Myself and my parents have it and we have all had a different reaction with it. I know things can depend on people's immune system but this seems to be different from other viruses where with the flu you know what you are going to get but not with this.
"
It makes little sense.
Both myself and my mum fell ill with it around the same time, a bit of a coincidence as we hadn't seen each other for a few weeks.
However, she is on immunosuppressants (which is why she was shielding) and her immune system was weakened...
She was slightly unwell where as myself with no previous illness, was really ill and had to go to hospital for treatment.
She was over it within a few weeks, im still suffering the effects over 4 months later..
Maybe blood groups play a part, perhaps some people are predisposed to having less effective immune systems..
There is lots of speculation but no hard evidence.
Every week, new discoveries are made about the virus so maybe soon, someone with far bigger brains than us mere mortals, will have that Eureka moment when they finally understand why. |
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"I don't get how some people have it for longer than others and so many people getting affected in different ways with it.
Myself and my parents have it and we have all had a different reaction with it. I know things can depend on people's immune system but this seems to be different from other viruses where with the flu you know what you are going to get but not with this.
"
It's such a new illness, we've had to start from zero, which is pretty rare in medicine |
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Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms. |
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms."
I'm curious for self interested reasons if/how this relates to auto immunity. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
That’s because we’ve worn masks, social distanced upped the hygiene and had a large uptake of the flu vaccine. Makes you think we should take these precautions every flu season like they do in Asian countries "
Probably possibly will do every winter.
Not sure if it's a good thing as surely colds strengthen the immune system. |
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms.
I'm curious for self interested reasons if/how this relates to auto immunity."
Try the article entitled: Autoimmunity: Introduction on the website of the British Society for Immunology.
I know you like to research for yourself |
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms.
I'm curious for self interested reasons if/how this relates to auto immunity.
Try the article entitled: Autoimmunity: Introduction on the website of the British Society for Immunology.
I know you like to research for yourself "
I'm not qualified to "research" this stuff (but thank you).
Threads of stuff I can't put together in my head, ha. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Noticed a lack of smell following a runny nose and the odd cough... positive swab.
Couple day of a headache and felt like a bad chest infection.
The day my ten day isolation finished my smell came back. Fine ever since |
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We both had it in mid-March, other half was working in a company largely staffed by Italians who all went home in Jan/Feb after the Xmas rush. I felt extremely unwell to the point of being taken to hospital, other half was as bad and for longer (around 3 weeks) he still has issues with breathing and energy. Slowly getting there! |
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms.
I'm curious for self interested reasons if/how this relates to auto immunity.
Try the article entitled: Autoimmunity: Introduction on the website of the British Society for Immunology.
I know you like to research for yourself
I'm not qualified to "research" this stuff (but thank you).
Threads of stuff I can't put together in my head, ha."
The suggested source should be understandable |
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"I don't get how some people have it for longer than others and so many people getting affected in different ways with it.
Myself and my parents have it and we have all had a different reaction with it. I know things can depend on people's immune system but this seems to be different from other viruses where with the flu you know what you are going to get but not with this.
"
All illnesses vary in different people though when you think about it.
Even with the flu one people are poleaxed for a few days whereas others are wiped out for weeks. Chicken pox has some people covered in spots, but feeling ok whereas others feel like they've been hit by a bus. Measles pre-vaccination was a lottery of mild childhood illness vs death sentence when it went through a family. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Started with a feel of tiredness then severe leg pains mainly in thighs. Then developed A cough and really high fever , struggled with breathing and oxygen levels. Still feeling feeling aches and pains 10 months later |
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By *had0wMan
over a year ago
Southampton |
"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways."
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me |
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Tested positive in October, had a cough, which I still have, that was that. However, I'm over 60, black and morbidly obese with chronic health issues that were under control to the point I'd forgotten about them but they've all flared up since October.
It could be coincidental but my last flare up was 2009 but since October they've all reappeared with a vengeance. I'd be on sick leave if I didn't work from home. |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways.
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me"
If course it does, molder
The truth is out there!
Little X files reference in case you missed it |
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By *had0wMan
over a year ago
Southampton |
"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways.
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me
If course it does, molder
The truth is out there!
Little X files reference in case you missed it "
Just a shame people can't see the truth. On the plus side the government now has a DNA database of everybody around the world who has been tested. |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
Why do you think that could be?
What do you think? "
As per the article in the independent this week. Our isolation and changed behaviours, our increased flu vaccine uptake, decreased community rates leads to decreased community rates.... There have been no recorded cases for 5 weeks. Brilliant news. Shows what can be achieved and will lead to an update in how we respond to flu in future years |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms."
I havent got a clue what you mean here but it sounds like you know what you are talking about |
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"Covid causes severe illness not directly, but via your body's reaction to trying to clear the infection. What causes the lung damage, cardiovascular symptoms, organ failure etc is your body effectively damaging itself. It's called "host mediated pathogenesis". People going into hospital by day 8 or 10 etc actually have broadly cleared the virus itself but their immune system is going into overdrive. The poster who said that a relative on immunosuppression was mildly ill - this actually makes some sense. The reason dexamethasone works is because it dampens down the excessive inflammatory response that results in severe symptoms."
I appreciated at the time that the immunosuppressive drugs prevented the immune overreaction.
What surprised me was that although she had a compromised immune system, the virus thankfully affected her far less than it affected me.
Seems almost counterintuitive...
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Tested positive in October, had a cough, which I still have, that was that. However, I'm over 60, black and morbidly obese with chronic health issues that were under control to the point I'd forgotten about them but they've all flared up since October.
It could be coincidental but my last flare up was 2009 but since October they've all reappeared with a vengeance. I'd be on sick leave if I didn't work from home."
x |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways.
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me"
Yes, we don't know the difference between the sequences of viruses from completely different families |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways.
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me
If course it does, molder
The truth is out there!
Little X files reference in case you missed it
Just a shame people can't see the truth. On the plus side the government now has a DNA database of everybody around the world who has been tested. "
Haha I ever thought of that!! |
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"I felt bad for around 4 days and I'm still not 100% but I've had worse flu
Notice how flu has become near enough non existent??
It's less contagious than Covid and is transmitted in similar ways.
Or are half the covid cases just normal flu and been declared "covid"?? Sounds more like the truth to me"
Flu has become near enough non existent because people haven’t been mixing to spread it!
Covid cases now are tested - a test wouldn’t show flu.... the viruses are different |
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