Anyone else experienced periodic episodes of paralysis? Covid related?
Has anyone else experienced periodic episodes of paralysis?
I also have extreme fatigue, muscle weakness, neuropathy, brain fog, problems with word finding, severe headaches and shortness of breath.
MRI, CT scan, EMG, nerve conduction studies and labs are all within normal limits.
I had COVID in January 2021 and have been out of work on disability since September due to the episodes of paralysis.
I have been to the COVID Recovery Clinic at Nuvance Health and to the Neuromuscular Disease Center at UR Medicine. Nobody has answers or suggestions for treatment.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Post-COVID Recovery & COVID-19 Support Group.
Oh, please update us on how it goes! Would love to keep checking in to this forum for any news or possible help or answers! The doctors are scratching their heads about my case.
I am afraid it is something I may have to live with from now on, but as long as I survive, I don't care. This is so much worse than just long covid, which by the way magically got better and better as the hyperkalemia and paralysis episodes got worse! I have no brain fog anymore, and a lot more energy. To bad I still can't workout or do anything that may cause potassium spikes and waves :s This is a really weird thing! And the doctors will never admit that this may have started because of covid or any of the vaccines, but I will not stop before I get answers!
Please keep in touch!
And the best of luck with rehabilitation! Listen to your body and don't push yourself, it can only make things worse. (just look at how I ended up, trying to ignore all the warning signs that my body gave me :/)
Bless you, and stay safe! <3
I have asked about the periodic paralysis and been dismissed. I now also have episodes of violent muscle spasms. I hope to begin bit B and glutathione injections along with hyperbaric oxygen and red light therapy next month.
Thank you for responding!
Have you gotten to measure your potassium while the muscle symptoms are ongoing..? Or else there is no way for them to rule that out. One can get paralysis and the same symptoms for both to little and to much potassium.
How exciting! I have read a lot about glutathione, but sadly my doctors forbid me to take any supplements before we have found the underlying cause of my condition.
Please don't give ut, push the doctors, trust your gut and listen to your body! Only you know it, inside and out.
I'll have to write more another time, it is pass my bedtime here in Norway, and I'm super tired 🙂
But so 'glad' to have found this thread and possible others who may have some of the same problems! So sorry that we have to go through this, but we have to have hope that someday we will get well again!
Sending healing thoughts!
Good luck with everything, and please stay in touch! <3
Sadly, there is no way for me to check it. I do,t even bother going to the hospital anymore. It is a waste of time. During lab draws my potassium level is always normal. I'm so glad to have found others as well!!! WE ARE NOT CRAZY, IT IS NOT ALL IN OUR HEADS...AND THETE IS LITERALLYNO WAY TO FAKE THESE EPISODES!!!
Hi, I am a friend of lene87 who got interested in this problem complex when another friend got symptoms of periodic paralysis (PP) after Covid.
PP is extremely rare, it is estimated that only around 75 ppl have it in Norway, out of a population of 5 million. It is even rarer to get it as an adult, but not impossible - there are a few studies out there of how Covid can "mess up" the ion channels in your body's membranes.
I've come across a grand total of five new possible "post Covid" PP-cases in the last year, but most likely there are many more out there, either without a diagnosis, or, especially if female, with a psych diagnosis.
Short version:
"Each type of Primary periodic paralysis (PPP) can have its own pattern of symptoms. For example:
HyperKPP:
- Attacks can be shorter and less severe, but can happen more often.
- Your symptoms can come on quickly, sometimes causing you to fall.
- Between episodes, you may have muscle spasms or trouble relaxing your muscles.
HypoKPP:
- You may have attacks every day, or you may have them once a year.
- Attacks can last anywhere from an hour to a day or two.
- Some people have weakness that changes from day to day. Later on, your muscles could become permanently weak and your symptoms could get more severe."
https://www.webmd.com/brain/primary-periodic-paralysis?
Thanks, @ronjar. You sound like a friend who really helps and does research for those in need. I appreciate your posting your findings to the post-COVID group here for all to see.
I have been having temporary paralysis for almost two years. I have been to three hospitals and seen many doctors. This all started shorty after my second COVID vaccine. My first time my blood pressure was elevated and I was paralyzed. I was rushed to the ER. They ran tests for a stoke and seizures. As of today no one can tell me why I am still having temporary paralysis. The longest period I have not had one is three days. They will last from minutes to hours. Some days I will have multiple episodes. I have had these in the doctor's office. I feel helpless at times. How can I get some help?
I got my first Covid infection in Dec 2020. So much background that I’m too tired to give. Since then I’ve had a few longer lasting episodes of paralysis (2 hours maybe), and some that I could feel coming on, and I rested and just stayed very still and quiet and it would go away in a little while. I had a bad episode at the end of June at an outdoor restaurant that was really humiliating, my friends pretty much had to carry me to the car.
I started taking the experimental drug therapy with maraviroc, and I started getting so much better. The week of August 28 I felt the best I’ve felt since I first got sick in 2020. It felt just like a miracle. Then I tested positive for Covid last Tuesday. At first I felt like a normal person with the flu. Yesterday I woke up and with my long Covid fatigue. Grief and despair and all of that stuff. Then, today (I’m staying at my sister’s and she’s only seen me a few times since I first got sick) I was dragging my self to the kitchen to get something to eat. I felt like I was racing against time because I knew I would crash soon. I finally sat down to eat, and it happened again, I could hardly lift my arms, I had to put my head on the table and my body wouldn’t function. I started sobbing because I couldn’t believe it was happening again. My sister heard me, came outside and had to - everything, I’m too tired to write it down - but she got oat milk for me to sip with a straw. She had to hold the cup. I was completely helpless and paralyzed. It lasted about 2 hours. I’m still very weak, but everything is working.
I got Covid again in 2022, and it was disastrous, I had to start healing all over again even though I was at about 80% of my precovid life. This January I had to stop teaching entirely (I was 1/2 time). Instead of holding steady, I got sicker and sicker and more disabled. Then my miracle treatment, and hope and joy, and now this. I’m terrified of what will happen now. That I may never get well.
Can you take the drug that helped you before?
I feel your pain. My symptoms are different, but I also wonder if I will ever be well again. Have found no help.
I have been having the same issues. I have been to numerous hospitals and seen a multitude of neurologist. They all say the same thing. They don't know why. I am so frustrated. This has been happening since November of 2020. The longest I have gone without an episode is 4 days. I have sharp pains in my feet sometimes. I can tell when one starts. I can't move my toes and quickly goes up my body. I can not move or talk, but am aware of mu surroundings. My husband comes into our bedroom to check on me. This has totally ruined my life. I am afraid to leave my house because I never know when I will have an episode. They have run all kinds of tests. Even a 72 hour EEG. Please give me some hope