COVID vaccines and neuropathy
I am 85 with small fiber neuropathy that is getting worse. My neurologist thought it would be a good idea for me to wait with the covid vaccine and not be first in line to see how it affected other people with neuropathy. Probably because it is a new technology. Has anyone had a problem with neuropathy after receiving the vaccine? If so, which vaccine?
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@mcd2021 I am sorry to hear all you and your daughter have endured post covid vaccine. Unfortunately in order to receive the vaccine one gives consent knowing the vaccines are experimental. They were approved as a health emergency. Not enough time has been allowed for anyone to learn of the long term effects. Perhaps more studies are being conducted for the covid mRNA vaccines because the vaccines use a different methodology than all previous vaccines for the other illnesses. Vaccines with mRNA have not been used on humans until now. I hope your doctors will be able to find help for relieving your symptoms soon. We all have to decide what is best. I too believe in vaccinations but at the same time I am cautious regarding what goes into my body. I don’t want additional possible health issues down the road especially when the symptoms are new to the doctors. When I am convinced it is safe for me I will get vaccinated. As they say if the shoe fits, wear it. I am waiting to learn as more data becomes available. So far I have not been given good reasons when the long term effects are not known. Mind you, as of today, according to the John Hopkins University website for covid infections and mortality, here in the United States the death rate is 1.68% of all covid infections. Meaning out of one hundred people who contract covid infection 2 will die and 98 will survive.
https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/mortality
Seems we have a choice to make according to our personal exposure risk. Do we risk the possible side effects of the covid infections or get the vaccination to risk possible side effects? It may be best to avoid covid infection all together if possible i.e. according to one’s own exposure risk. While the covid vaccines have shown to reduce the number of hospitalizations and deaths they do not prevent hospitalizations and deaths amongst the vaccinated individuals as per the CDC website. Unfortunately, as another Mayo member pointed out, no vaccine is 100% effective. I wish you well in finding answers to help you soon. Hang in there!
"here in the United States the death rate is 1.68% of all covid infections. Meaning out of one hundred people who contract covid infection 2 will die and 98 will survive."
That's not correct. Confirmed cases are not total infections. The initial JAMA report pegged mortality at 5 per thousand, severity at 5 per 100. 8 out 10 are subclinical. That's probably about right. The insidiousness of covid is how infectious it is, not how lethal it is.
Hi @sdf2000 thanks for pointing out your information. I am using the data John Hopkins University is presenting on their website. It shows the total number of deaths to the total number of covid infections in the United States since the first reported covid infection. I understand and was not looking for the insidiousness. That would differ depending on the variant.
The John Hopkins data was using confirmed cases, not total infections. Total infections are always going to be unknown.
Hi John, my sincere thanks for sharing that info. The link states that multisystem inflammatory syndrome affects children and adults who were previously infected with Covid. Thankfully I have not so I don't think that's what is going on. My symptoms also do not match which I was glad to see. I was recently told that the vaccine likely pushed me into an autoimmune overload which is not to say I have an autoimmune disease but rather there is now excess inflammation in my body and my immune system is unable to regulate due to the overload. As a result I am experiencing peripheral neuropathy and RA-like symptoms in my knees and hands. I am hoping that over time the medication I am taking, along with supplements and an anti-inflammatory diet will help. Many thanks again for your thoughtful reply.
I'm so sorry to hear. Sounds like there's a lot of us that have had very similar reactions. Have you all now recovered from your adverse reactions? I truly hope so.
Many thanks for your well wishes. I completely understand your decision to wait until you feel it is safe to be vaccinated. I felt much the same way even though I was eligible to get vaccinated much earlier than I finally did. I was waiting to hear about any potential side effects besides the sore arm and flu-like symptoms we were told to expect. All I was told and all I read was that it was safe and I should just do it. Unfortunately my body couldn't handle it and from what I've read on this message board and elsewhere plus what I've heard from my doctor, I'm far from alone. But you don't hear about a lot of these serious side effects on the news. That's unfortunate because people need to be aware of all the risks in order to make a truly informed decision that they are comfortable with. Wishing you well and all the very best in deciding what is right for you.
Oh my goodness, I'm so sorry to read about your ordeal. It does sound like we have had much the same issues. I keep thinking that surely the inflammation will peak and start to taper off and all of these awful symptoms will gradually abate. But instead it seems like as time goes by some things, my hands in particular, are getting worse and I worry how far this might go. Since I was advised not to get the second shot I keep thinking maybe as my partial immunity wanes, so will the adverse reaction but who knows. And for someone like you who is fully vaccinated, had a severe reaction and now looking at waning immunity and boosters...what in the world do you do? I agree that it takes a mental toll as well and I too wish this syndrome would be acknowledged but I've heard nothing reported. I guess things like this are considered "rare" so not worth warning people about. However I'm very concerned that it may not be so rare anymore if they have to regularly administer boosters to maintain immunity. Have you tried following an anti-inflammatory diet or vitamin supplements of any sort? I figure if it might help I'm giving it a go. I also have been using a magnesium lotion on my legs. Just started all that so it's too soon to know if it will be beneficial. I hope you will post updates on how you are doing. Keep positive, I know it's hard, and I pray we all see improvement soon too!
@sdf2000 so sorry for the misunderstanding. I should have said I used the data provided by John Hopkins University for the known corona virus deaths in relationship to the total confirmed covid infection cases. All my information was based on their website.
We all have health issues to overcome. Don’t give up in finding answers for yourself. Look at me, 5 years and still learning through trial and error. Basically I have no other choice when physicians have no clue for guidance.
I had the same reaction - to not only the Covid vaccine, but also the Quadravaletn flu vaccine in Oct 2020 and the Shingrix vaccine in Jan 2020. My body apparently reacts to the immune system activation with a hyper inflammatory flare. It affects ALL of me - at one point even my scalp hurt. Fortunately my doc figured this out and I am given a two week course of prednisone. That calms it down.
Some good news too. My daughter, who is immune-suppressed, received her 3rd Moderna dose on Tuesday. She had Covid in 2020, 2 doses of the vaccine in December and January, and was very ill each time. The third dose left her with a sore arm, mild aches and mild fatiguee. It just shows that a person will not necessarily react to the vaccine every time.
Sue