The Role of Nutrition and Supplements in Managing Chronic Fatigue Post-COVID

May 26, 2021 | Desiree Ahrens | @ahrensdesiree | Comments (14)

Posted on behalf of Dr. Bala Munipalli, M.D., from the Post-Acute Sequelae of COVID (PASC) Clinic at Mayo Clinic Jacksonville.

We have known for many years that nutrition is linked to immunity and severity of infections. People who are not well-nourished are at higher risk for infections. Chronic and severe infections can cause people to not have enough vitamins, minerals, or other important nutrients they need.   People with diabetes, hypertension, older age, and cancer tend to have more severe COVID-19 infection and are more likely to have long-term problems from COVID-19 (Zheng, et al, 2020).

For those reasons, it is important to eat healthy.  A healthy diet includes lots of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes (beans), and nuts, and moderate amounts of fish, dairy, and poultry (chicken, turkey). It also encourages people to limit red and processed meats, refined carbohydrates, and sugar.  By eating this way, the body gets all the vitamins and minerals along with the protein, fats, carbohydrates it needs to help recover from COVID-19.

Many people have read or heard about supplements being recommended for managing acute (short term) symptoms of COVID-19 (vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin D, vitamin E, zinc, omega-3 fatty acids, probiotics) (12).   This comes from research done to look at the use of these nutrients in acute respiratory infections.  We have seen the benefit of using supplements in older people who often do not have enough of these vitamins and minerals because of chronic health conditions, changes in appetite, or limited access to healthy foods.

We may see that limited access to healthy foods, or the cost of healthy foods, makes having a healthy diet even more difficult. Surveys have shown that most people in the U. S. do not eat the types or amounts of food that meet national guidelines.

Currently there are no studies that show a definite benefit for people to take vitamin or mineral supplement to help reduce the effects of COVID-19 either short or long-term.  For that reason, it is important for people to practice good nutrition when they can.  If people are unable to get enough vitamins and minerals through food, then and only then, they may want to consider a multivitamin and Vitamin D3 (1000 IU) to take every day. Older people, black individuals, smokers, and people with autoimmune disorders may often not have enough Vitamin D. Vitamin D may help because it reduces the levels of a certain enzyme, which is thought to be a way for the COVID virus to get into the body.

To discuss with others Post-COVID Syndrome, join our discussion group.

References

Bland, J. The Long Haul of COVID-19 Recovery: Immune Rejuvenation versus Immune Support. Integrative Medicine. 2020; 19 (6):18-22.

Myhill, S, Booth, NE, McLaren-Howard, J. Chronic fatigue syndrome and mitochondrial dysfunction. Int J Clin Exp Med. 2009;2(1):1-16.

Thomas, L. Some nutritional supplements may help prevent or mitigate COVID-19 severity. News Medical Life Sciences. 2020.

Zheng, Y, Liu, X, Le, W, et al. A human circulating immune cell landscape in aging and COVID-19. Protein Cell. 2020;; 11(10):740-770.

Article by Dr. Bala Munipalli, M.D., from the Post-Acute Sequelae of COVID (PASC) Clinic at Mayo Clinic Jacksonville.

 

Interested in more newsfeed posts like this? Go to the Post-COVID Recovery blog.

@heathernico22

Besides the unusual fatigue, is anyone else still feeling very feverish, but doesn't actually have a fever? The body aches and pains and the feverish feelings are too much to handle for an entire month now. I wish I knew what would help me. I am already taking Zinc and Vitamin D3 (allowed daily limits of both).

Jump to this post

Yes I too feel feverish from time to time (it's not consistent). I will feel like this for a day but no fever. I warm, achey, and feel like I might be coming down with something. After a good nights sleep I feel fine again. This has been happening off and on since April after I recovered from covid

REPLY

If I go into work for more than 5 hours a day, the next day I feel feverish ( like I have a flu). It really is not good. It’s been 8 weeks . Very frustrating.

REPLY

I am almost 4 weeks from my first positive Covid test. My energy level is better and cold symptoms almost all gone. My GERD symptoms are better. Unfortunately, I am experiencing periods of a more rapid resting heart rate than what is normal for me. During that time, I feel light headed and uncomfortable. My monitor this morning recorded 82. My normal is around 60 or maybe a little lower. I already take a low dose of bisoprolol. I had these symptoms in early 2021 a few weeks after my first Covid vaccine. I went through all kinds of cardio tests and they found nothing conclusive. One doc thought I might have had Covid at one point and not have known it!
Has anyone else experienced this?

REPLY
@prancer20

I am almost 4 weeks from my first positive Covid test. My energy level is better and cold symptoms almost all gone. My GERD symptoms are better. Unfortunately, I am experiencing periods of a more rapid resting heart rate than what is normal for me. During that time, I feel light headed and uncomfortable. My monitor this morning recorded 82. My normal is around 60 or maybe a little lower. I already take a low dose of bisoprolol. I had these symptoms in early 2021 a few weeks after my first Covid vaccine. I went through all kinds of cardio tests and they found nothing conclusive. One doc thought I might have had Covid at one point and not have known it!
Has anyone else experienced this?

Jump to this post

Anyone out there that Covid 19 brought on Ulcerative Colitis and if so how it is being treated. I have been ill with this for over a year now. Oral medications not working to put this disease into remission along with the farique which is overwhelming. Any information would be appreciated. They want me to have ENTYVIO IV infusions which scare me . Very expensive and I do not like the known possible side effects. Thanks ..Kitty2

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.