Covid Recovery: How can I manage GI issues?

Posted by sieb369 @sieb369, Jan 3, 2022

It has been 5 weeks since my COVID symptoms began. I am well past the isolation date. I had nausea and diarrhea during COVID along with the usual symptoms of cough, fatigue, rapid heartbeat and sinus issues. I have felt like I was over this, but I began having GI pain in the last week. I feel as if my intestines are sore on the inside. I guess it is inflammation. Has anyone else had this and is there anything I can do to help it? Probiotics maybe?

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I found that I had to experiment and change my diet to minimize GI pain. I do not eat the same things now that I did pre-Covid. The downside is that I now eat pretty much the same foods every day, with little variety. I have learned by bitter experience that I can eat other things if I'm willing to pay the price in GI pain. And I drink 2500 mL of water each day.

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Greetings, you are not alone, many cases of covid have been gastrointestinal instead of respiratory, including mine, and a year of long covid. Things that have helped me are the usual suspects. They might or might not help you and I am not a doctor! Quality probiotic like Garden of Life, adding probiotic strain Bacillus subtilis was a miracle, prebiotic like Heather's Tummy Fiber. Things that did not help at all: my old gerd meds like prevacid. It is worth doing research on covid's impact on ACE2, functional medicine MD recommend a few supplements and diet changes that helped me a lot. He reco'd avocados and chick peas to help rebuild gut biome, and they taste good. I have seen Prevacid recommended because of its antihistamine properties, but it does not seem to help me. Everyone is different! Be well!

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I had covid in January 2022 and then again in July 2022. My symptoms for long haul became almost unbearable. My digestive system is struggling to digest a lot of different foods. Has anyone had to change your diet to avoid reactions certain. What have some of you done to avoid thi?. What kind of diet did you change to?

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@marley7119

I had covid in January 2022 and then again in July 2022. My symptoms for long haul became almost unbearable. My digestive system is struggling to digest a lot of different foods. Has anyone had to change your diet to avoid reactions certain. What have some of you done to avoid thi?. What kind of diet did you change to?

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I became allergic to wheat ( or gluten) and red meat. I think there’s other things that trigger allergies but reaction isn’t as bad and haven’t figured out what. Dealing with reflux and think possible SIBO. I’m being treated for a UTI with cipro which is one option for SIBO and so far feel better. I’ve also doubled my probiotic and added prebiotic fiber and cider vinegar.

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@shawnasierra

I became allergic to wheat ( or gluten) and red meat. I think there’s other things that trigger allergies but reaction isn’t as bad and haven’t figured out what. Dealing with reflux and think possible SIBO. I’m being treated for a UTI with cipro which is one option for SIBO and so far feel better. I’ve also doubled my probiotic and added prebiotic fiber and cider vinegar.

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Thank you. I do suspect gluten, dairy and red meat

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I have a similar problem. You might try adding low histamine foods to your diet. That has helped me tremendously.I also take 40 mg of omeprazole and Zyrtec and Pepsid. That has helped a lot.

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@marley7119

Thank you. I do suspect gluten, dairy and red meat

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Easy way to find out. Eliminate them. I definitely feel a difference

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Another promising probiotic is SLV#3 my gastroenterologist suggested I try it after years of telling me that all probiotics were the same - just get one with 3 strains. I looked it up on the National Institute of Health website and was totally amazed at the potential benefits as compared to the over-the-counter products (This one has to be kept refrigerated so it won't be on the shelf so ask your pharmacist if he can order if he doesn't have it in his fridge.) It's a little pricey but I'll try anything to tame the storm raging in my gut.

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@lbyrd02

Another promising probiotic is SLV#3 my gastroenterologist suggested I try it after years of telling me that all probiotics were the same - just get one with 3 strains. I looked it up on the National Institute of Health website and was totally amazed at the potential benefits as compared to the over-the-counter products (This one has to be kept refrigerated so it won't be on the shelf so ask your pharmacist if he can order if he doesn't have it in his fridge.) It's a little pricey but I'll try anything to tame the storm raging in my gut.

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please describe benefits.

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I have only read the data to date - I logged into the National Institute of Health (NIH) and read there write up on SLV#3. My doctor has set up an endoscopy for my upper intestine diabetologist in a couple of weeks, I have only been taking it for one week and am not sure of what benefits if any will results but given the write up from the NIH it will be on my go to list. If you take a probiotic search for it on the web and include NIH at the end of your search to compare the potential benifits - I was very impressed. For those that don't know what NIH is search for it -

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