Low-grade fevers weeks after COVID: Is this common with long COVID?
I was hospitalized for COVID and home since 2/3. On 2/24 started to have low grade fevers in the evening. Tylenol takes care of the fever. I am on home oxygen still but improving. Mobility and strength is better. Important to note immunosuppression due to cancer therapy a year ago. Lymphocytes are still depleted. Is this common with long COVID?
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sorry for double post, but wandering if we all have something similar. I have my tonsils removed and have ironical laryngitis(pearl throat), also have been smoking cannabis for last 10 years. Allergic to pollen(ambrosia), did antigen therapy for it and now not allergic to this pollen anymore.
My thought are that somehow covid became an auto-immune disease and it would be chronic like other viruses like Herpes, HPV, EBV... think those were grand grand parents of modern covid virus.
please share if possible your experience and maybe arguments
I feel the same way, but I am 36 overall healthy male... forgotten to ask if others were vaccinated or not? I had covid 2-3 times before this one and never vaccinated. thx
Thanks for the Vitamin C tip! I have a lingering low-grade fever as well. I’ve taken Vitamin C once a day since my diagnosis, but I will bump it up and see if that helps.
Thanks again!
I am recovering from my first infection of COVID19, the flu, and a sinus infection related to my sinus disease on January 30, 2023. During a two week isolation at home, I had to visit the emergency room twice. During the second visit, I spent six hours undergoing testing. It was determined that I had blood clots from COVID. I am fully vaccinated for COVID (last vaccine was in October 2022) and I received the flu vaccine the day after Thanksgiving holiday 2022.
My sleep-wake circadian rhythm is off. I am taking VitaFusion gummy supplements of Melatonin before bedtime. I fall asleep, but wake up an hour or two later and cannot go back to sleep for hours. I have intermittent headaches, brain fog where I forget things and where I put things, chest pain (administered muscle relaxant), and I am now on a routine use of an inhaler for my asthma. When I walk short distances, I am out of breath.
I developed a COVID rash all over my body, including the toes. After three weeks, the rash is starting to subside.
On February 20th, I returned to work. I am applying less effort at my work activities until I feel I can perform at normalcy.
I regularly take vitamin supplements, including zinc, vitamin D3, C, and B12.
Do you have any suggestions to improve my action plan to recover?
Thank-you for your support.
I caught COVID December 2022 and for a week had awful symptoms. But apart from being a bit short of breath due to a partial collapsed lobe of lung and feeling off from inflammation of liver, my ABSOLUTE worst symptom is sinus based. Continual thick white ropy muck sometimes gagging on it or choking. Head feels full but no coloured phlegm so can’t be bacterial. Nothing works no meds.
Steam helps and at night try to sleep propped up but keep clearing throat. Sips of hot drinks help and then it all comes back. Only getting 2-4hrs sleep nocte. Fully vaccinated Times it’s all too much.
Hey I just read your comment. My mom has the same thing except her fevers are all day. What did you do to help? I would really appreciate it
Hey, this is happening to me too. It’s been 4 months now and tylenol and advil don’t help anymore. What did you do that helped?
Hello, what did you do to help with the fevers? I have a similar condition, except now my fevers stopped going down with tylenol.
How do you feel now? I’m experiencing the same exact thing.
I am day 13 post Covid and have completed the course of paxlovid. I keep having fevers from 101.6-103.3 even though I am almost 2 weeks out from my first testing positive. I was wondering about rebound Covid but all my Covid tests are negative and my only symptom is fever. Thoughts?