New long COVID symptoms? Have you encountered new ones?

Posted by greg1234 @greg1234, Apr 18, 2022

Hello friends, I am in month 8 of long covid. I have seen seen reduced severity of original symptoms, but also find new ones that I can not find any other cause for. Here's one: food that I have eaten my whole life now is starting to irritate my tongue and the roof of my mouth. My tongue burns and the roof of my mouth feels raw like I rubbed it with sandpaper. All spicy seasoning has long been eliminated. Maybe an allergic reaction that is aggravated by the autoimmune aspect of Long Covid? Speaking of which, my seasonal juniper allergies have been terrible this year, much worse than ever before. Same function?

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I am in month 20 of my Long Covid and although I don't have changes that you describe, I have definitely undergone systematic changes since my acute stage. One positive change is stronger, harder nails. Go figure. IBS is the other very significant change. I used to have IBS D (diarrhea) and now am really struggling with constipation for the first time in my life. I feel like my Long Covid symptoms of fatigue, breathlessness with exertion, weak legs, etc. are improving but every time I push myself, I know that the nasty virus has not left my system.

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I have also had a change in symptoms, including the kinds of food I can tolerate. For example, I used to eat oatmeal regularly. But two months ago, it gave me severe heart palpitations. Recently, I have been able to eat it again.

A wide range of symptoms seems to be a hallmark of this illness for me. The symptoms fluctuate wildly, both in terms of intensity and frequency.

Like others, I am learning not to push myself. On more than one occasion I have started to feel better for a few days so I would increase my activity level, only to have a setback. The good news is that I am very gradually beginning to feel better. (It just gets discouraging when I have a setback. But the setbacks are getting less frequent.)

Has anyone else found that a good night's sleep seems to make a difference? If I get a solid 7-8 hours of sleep, my symptoms often feel less intense that day.

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@welchllb

I am in month 20 of my Long Covid and although I don't have changes that you describe, I have definitely undergone systematic changes since my acute stage. One positive change is stronger, harder nails. Go figure. IBS is the other very significant change. I used to have IBS D (diarrhea) and now am really struggling with constipation for the first time in my life. I feel like my Long Covid symptoms of fatigue, breathlessness with exertion, weak legs, etc. are improving but every time I push myself, I know that the nasty virus has not left my system.

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I am curious why you characterize the virus as, still being in you system? Is that how your doctor refers to it. Are you involved in a "long covid" clinic? Thanks

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I've been on the waiting list for a Long Covid Clinic for a year. My symptoms are less severe but they are the same ones I have had since my acute Covid.

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I came down with Covid this past September 2021. I am now having a strange smell lingering around me that no one else smells. It is so bad at times I can taste it. I can't figure out
what the smell is. I was just wondering if anyone else has experienced this.

I can not cope with this at all. It's horrible.

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@helnz13

I came down with Covid this past September 2021. I am now having a strange smell lingering around me that no one else smells. It is so bad at times I can taste it. I can't figure out
what the smell is. I was just wondering if anyone else has experienced this.

I can not cope with this at all. It's horrible.

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My friend has the same thing, she thinks it smells metallic. No one around her believes her.

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I can smell an odd odor at times, however, my nose is mostly stopped up. Tried about everything so I don't have to breathe through my mouth.

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@cmd

My friend has the same thing, she thinks it smells metallic. No one around her believes her.

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I have a metallic taste with ham and cold cuts, But mostly when I bring up phlegm.

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I also have food and medicine sensitivity that I didn't before covid. I have heard from friends who are seasonal allergy sufferers that it is a particularly bad season with higher reaction than past years. So allergy may just be the year. Check out Central sensitization syndrome. Something I have recently learned about but explains so much post covid stuff.

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@jmj01

I have also had a change in symptoms, including the kinds of food I can tolerate. For example, I used to eat oatmeal regularly. But two months ago, it gave me severe heart palpitations. Recently, I have been able to eat it again.

A wide range of symptoms seems to be a hallmark of this illness for me. The symptoms fluctuate wildly, both in terms of intensity and frequency.

Like others, I am learning not to push myself. On more than one occasion I have started to feel better for a few days so I would increase my activity level, only to have a setback. The good news is that I am very gradually beginning to feel better. (It just gets discouraging when I have a setback. But the setbacks are getting less frequent.)

Has anyone else found that a good night's sleep seems to make a difference? If I get a solid 7-8 hours of sleep, my symptoms often feel less intense that day.

Jump to this post

The rare, solid night's sleep is like turning the volume down on my symptoms-my brain is 'brighter' and my muscles don't ache

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