Just leave a comment if you're COVID long hauler. In other words, if you had COVID and have symptoms 3+ months later. Also mention symptoms, blood type (if you know it) and any odd health quirks you had before COVID

Want to do personal research, will share my insights.

So far what they know is that Long-term COVID is extremely linked to Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS). MCAS has many similar symptoms as LH, and both have sense of smell implicated--aspirin is said to fix this in MCAS. MCAS patients who were already being treated for MCAS this year did not develop COVID, so that's the smoking gun.

I personally had it in March, still have symptoms. Mainly POTS tachycardia, especially while peeing. Also big O2 drops that go back to 99--these are worse when I haven't eaten carbs. Also recurring hemorrhoids that come and go in cycles.

I also have MCAS symptoms since puberty (27 now). Prickly itching sensations with spicy foods, pain in my hair follicles, random burning in my eyes, many others too. Most of these would go away in a matter of minutes so I never seeked medical help for them.

  • qublics [they/them,she/her]
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    (no known COVID infection)

    i'm not a doctor, but if i was your doctor, would try supplementing potassium (prefer avocados, spinach, potatoes) just to see what happens.

    tachycardia with peeing sounds like electrolyte issues, most likely losing too much potassium.

    possibly you're not eating too little carbs, but too much salt instead. sodium is like opposite potassium.
    in any case, amount of carbs is irrelevant, what matters is glycemic index and insulin spikes.

    angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) is needed for kidney function and directly involved with COVID.
    other common cause of low potassium is diarrhea; but it can show up in many situations.

    MCAS seems plausible, but idk anything about that.
    but if MCAS causes long term COVID then I would suspect kidney damage as complication.

    although, if it is more general kidney damage, electrolyte drink (no sugar because insulin spikes) could be better than just potassium, absorbs faster anyway.
    effects should be obvious within fifteen minutes if electrolytes are part of the problem.

    "The true method of knowledge is experiment."