Long Covid and Doxycycline: Inflammation Theory
I was given doxycycline and azithromycin last November for Covid/Pneumonia. I was quite ill with sore throat, cough, fever etc. I was also given Paxlovid. A week later I felt much better and then a week after that I felt worse. I stopped the doxycycline after 20 days due to stomach upset, but did take the full course of other drugs. I now suffer from heart palpitations all the time, extreme fatigue, in and out sense of smell and taste, brain fog, and muscle pain. My energy is not even half of what I used to enjoy.
I decided to take the rest of the doxycycline which is about 10 tablets, one each day. Doxy has been proven to help with inflammation and my primary doc said the virus causes inflammation and that is what I am suffering from based on my symptoms. My primary doc who did nothing but talk to me, my cardiologist who tested me with a 7 day Zio heart monitor, Urgent Care team when I went back for a final x-ray, all had this advice: "wait it out, it could take two months or two years." I am a 75 year old female college professor and I am not going to sit around and watch muscle loss, suffer exhaustion, have poor memory, etc. without trying SOMETHING. So, I am taking the remainder of the Doxy that was prescribed for me in November 2023. I am taking it for the anti-inflammatory benefits. Has anyone else tried Doxycycline for long Covid symptoms?
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Yes, and after years that is very hard advise to follow.
Wishing for some breakthrough for all of us, but my hope is quite diminished as these things take so much time.
I can’t help but compare to the Aids epidemic that took years and years before there was a good treatment.
I get scolded for being negative. I was always an optimistic person until THIS.
It could be a coincidence, but three days after starting my dosage of 100 mg of doxycycline each day, I felt better and better. My energy level has improved greatly and the heart palpitations have lessened. I still have extreme muscle pain but that is from the statin drug that I began taking last year. I stopped it for a week and voila the muscle pain went away. I started that drug back up and bingo....severe joint pain which was worse after COVID. So many times in my life I have had a instant "feeling" or "insight" or intuition, and am never wrong, and I do not believe this situation of getting better taking doxy is a coincidence. I am meeting with my "trials" physician next week and will tell him about my experience.
There's been a study (I read about it in Scientific American) of people on injectable weight loss drugs that found that they act as anti-inflammatories as well, causing significant improvements in things like IBS, chronic fatigue, and fibromyalgia. I've got all three since Covid, so I'm in the process of getting my HMO to approve me for a weight loss drug, technically for weight loss but honestly my weight is not the reason I'm trying it!
My sympathies for all you've been through and for the frustration/anger at the nonresponsiveness. Not to excuse the pros, but think it's just all too new. Nobody really knows. I've read thatCovid can reactivate latent conditions like Lyme and herpes. Did you ever try the late Stephen Harrod Buhner's Lyme protocol? Buhner was a brilliant herbalist, scrupulous researcher, and thought outside the box. Check it out. He wrote a book on Lyme...good luck. Sending hugs.
I get it! There are so many drugs that can help with inflammation internally that we still cannot grasp which works and which doesn't. I know when I had the terrible case of COVID and Pneumonia last November, I was immediately given a prescription of Doxycycline AND Zithromycin. The Zithromycin was for the pneumonia, and it cleared it right up. Doxycycline was given to me first before I tested positive for COVID. I did some digging and found that it is a good anti inflammatory drug even though not given out often. Then the long COVID hit with the heart palpitations and chronic fatigue. So far, I am far less fatigued since I started taking Doxy. The heart palpitations have improved but are still there somewhat. I decided to take it for ten days. I felt better after the second day and counted day three as the day of success. I did this after much research and also because I receive Doxy if I get a tick bite because I had Lyme Disease. I wish you much success with your HMO! Keep in touch!!
Your experience sounds a lot like mine with having to be your own advocate and trialing of meds!
I know before finding an infectious disease(ID) specialist who focuses on chronic illnesses and doesn’t subscribe to “there’s no chronic Lymes”, I was trying to talk every doc I know into assisting me with finding something, ANYTHING!
I found Paxlovid was my hero and then I added Cipro and WOW! That made me feel like my long remembered self!…
But that only lasted 2 weeks and Paxlovid caused too much GI distress after 6 mo use.
I finally got into to see my new LC ID doc who has helped me make sense of things. I’m trialing other meds from lab results showing a reactivation of both EBV (mono) and VZV (chickenpox). So it makes sense that antivirals (Paxlovid) helped my symptoms and then because these are GI viruses and they can cause other issues like SIBO or bacterial overgrowth, then the one round of antibiotics helped clear out all of the bacteria overgrowth but the second or third were ineffective.
One important aspect she mentioned is that what they’re finding is Covid reactivates other dormant viruses and bacterial infections. So your past Lyme’s along with the antibiotics really helping you makes a lot of sense because it sounds like your Lyme’s is reactivated and Lyme’s is bacterial.
Just an FYI, Paxlovid rebound is not caused by Paxlovid but there are some case studies showing insufficient viral clearance with only 5 days. IMHO, I believe those who have underlying conditions or past infections (like Lyme’s or bad cases of EBV, CMV, have MCAS, CFS, etc.) should get 10 days of Pax and that would stop the rebound ( I had it really bad too). But that’s my theory and would need further research.
I’m no expert here but from family experience as well as research, I believe Lyme’s needs even more than Doxy to really kill everything off, as my Aunt had treatment for a year with a cocktail of many herbs and antibiotics. I believe that Doxy alone isn’t truly killing everything but merely managing the active growth while others are hiding (in stationary phase), so it can return. But definitely need an expert!
I hope you get answers and treatment for your Lyme’s! And I hope this is your answer to healing 🙏🏻
Can we get the name of your Infection Diseases specialist?
I will try this. Thank you
Doxycycline is a front line treatment in covid 19 pneumonia as of 2024 apparently. It works well. I also had azithromycin first and doxy second. Both helped but the persistent cough remained( and difficult phlem still bothersome). A small fever presents on and off. I constantly go through a bad period that can be minutes or more and I literally sweat it out on the days no fever is presenting. I am hoping this is a good thing and the body is cleaning the toxins. My weight will go up and down ten pounds in one week. This is inflammation and loss of appetite or increased appetite working. Total hormonal relationship. My left side of my body seems to have more inflammation in the arties and if I look at the left and right side of the body there are visible differences in the arties, their size and their visibility. This is also very present and noticeable when inflammation is affecting the body especially the joints, knees, hips, and elbows (My elbows are now very sensitive to touch, almost too painful). The hit of antibiotics - back to back for secondary bacterial infections- and a viral infection(covid 19 is viral) can definitively be the reasoning behind inflammation, pain and discomfort.
Settling down the nervous system is a must. How you go about this is the big test. Trial and error, and what is comfortable is different for everybody. The best thing to do is to rest, be calm, hydrate, and take a probiotic - GUT Health is key to treating inflammation. There are specific steroids being used that block unwanted inflammation in the intestines which are advancing in the care of multi-system post Covid 19 inflammation and disease. There is a definite link to the GUT. I have found at least three papers that have discussed the virus living in the gut and now is become a topic of research as identifying markers and reducing the illnesses occurring with this function of the disease. This is very closely linked to re- infection of Covid 19 in certain individuals. This is also identified as having a significant co relation to Long Covid sufferers. Long Covid is now known to have a pathology of increased secondary infections, and in some cases this can lead to more complicated outcomes or morbidities than once known.
As for my type of inflammation, I will elevate the area that is most bothered by pain or/ and inflammation as much as I can. Lymphatic exercises, stretches, and self massages will contribute to a healthy healing as well as diet.
Make sure to seek medical attention if things change too dramatically as this happens frequently with post covid inflammation and infections. This is key. With having Covid 19 and pneumonia, and another system bothered with secondary infection I remain vigilant but cannot stand the idea of entering an ER. I think I would have to be taken kicking and dragging all the way with the idea that I could actually be helped without sensing the dread of another infection or bad news. I try to charm my health by having good news to go off of and God willing it gives me more leverage on the "bad" days I have to talk to a doctor.
I think at all times they are putting it back in our hands to do the reading and research as to what works best for pain management. The more you can assist in your own care the better a health care team can attest to what needs to be done immediately.
This brings me to journaling. The post-Covid journey changes by the hour some days. (Especially if taking certain steroids or medications). Every new medical intervention will bring on different changes. Even the littlest thing can assist a health care provider with a better insight as to what to narrow in on. Write it all down, or record it on your phone through voice messaging to yourself.
Water, rest, and one goal a day is a plan. Learn something new about this crazy covid every day you can. Nothing is small, but managed easier if found earlier. Prevent as much as you can from going down a road of new diseases. This disease is all about inflammation... all diseases have inflammation involved.
The idea is to learn to manage the inflammation, and pain, and changes that happen... stay well, stay healthy, and yes put your battle face on when you need to advocate for you. This narrow view we have of this disease is constantly being fed new research, new information on Covid 19 and its effects on human anatomy and physiology. Physiological Wellness is going to be taking its script from the past and the present through human experiences and medical theories combined. I can say "Document all that you are experiencing." "Read as much as you can bookmark it." It may be the best advice I can pass on to you. Take a break and reflect, stretch your mind, and meet your expectations of care no matter how challenging! Things will improve in at least one of those experiences. Sometimes small wins are the greatest.
It is Metformin that has shown potential with a healthier outcome with Covid 19 treatments.