Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• Some with long-haul COVID-19 find relief through vaccinatio­n,

- By Lenny Bernstein and Ben Guarino

Arianna Eisenberg endured long-haul COVID-19 for eight months — a recurring nightmare of soaking sweats, crushing fatigue, insomnia, brain fog and muscle pain.

But Ms. Eisenberg’s tale has a happy ending that neither she nor current medical science can explain. Thirtysix hours after her second shot of the COVID-19 vaccine last month, her symptoms were gone, and they haven’t returned.

“I really felt back to myself,” the 34-year-old Brooklyn therapist said, “to a way that I didn’t think was possible when I was really sick.”

Some people who have spent months suffering from long-haul COVID-19 are taking to social media to report their delight at seeing their symptoms disappear after their vaccinatio­ns, leaving experts chasing yet another puzzling clinical developmen­t surroundin­g the disease caused by the coronaviru­s.

“The only thing that we can safely assume is that an unknown proportion of people who acquire SARS-CoV-2 have long-term symptoms,” said Dr. Steven Deeks, an infectious disease physician at the University of California at San Francisco. “We know the questions. We have no answers. Hard stop.”

Those questions include: If long-haulers are suffering from immune systems that went awry and never reset, why would vaccines — which rev up the immune system — help some of them? Are reservoirs of the coronaviru­s hiding in the body? Are some long-haulers experienci­ng a placebo effect from the vaccine? Or does the disease simply take longer to run its course in some people?

U.S. clinicians and researcher­s have yet to come to a consensus on even a definition

for long-haul COVID19. They do not know how many people have it, what all the symptoms may be, or who tends to develop problems that persist or begin after the virus is cleared.

A December workshop held by the National Institutes of Health that began grappling with those issues suggested that 10% to 30% of people infected with the coronaviru­s suffer some longterm symptoms. And on Feb. 23, NIH announced that it would spend more than $1.1 billion over four years to study the effects of long-term COVID-19.

But there is little guidance about vaccinatio­n for people suffering through extended battles with the disease, other than medical authoritie­s’ instructio­n that everyone in the U.S. should be immunized. Diana Berrent, founder of Survivor Corps, an online organizati­on of people with long-term COVID-19 symptoms, said many members of the group were initially hesitant to comply for fear that the

vaccine would create more havoc with their immune systems.

One tiny study released Monday but not yet submitted for peer review concluded that people with longterm symptoms who get vaccinated are more likely to see their problems resolve or not worsen than people who have not been vaccinated. But the research out of the University of Bristol in England compared only 44 vaccinated patients against 22 unvaccinat­ed ones and was designed to determine whether the vaccines were safe for people with longhaul COVID-19.

The authors said it is possible that the act of getting the vaccine influenced the patients’ recall of symptoms, what they described as a “a placebo/nocebo effect.”

When Survivor Corps informally surveyed its members recently, 216 people said they felt no different after vaccinatio­n, 171 said their conditions improved and 63 reported that they felt worse, Ms. Berrent said.

Ms. Eisenberg, who said she had a mild case of COVID-19 last summer, doesn’t believe the placebo theory fits because she had no expectatio­n that the vaccine would help with her debilitati­ng symptoms. She was immunized because tests did not detect antibodies to the virus in her blood, so she was terrified that she could be reinfected. She received her second shot of the Moderna vaccine on Feb. 5.

“I didn’t expect the vaccine to do this,” she said. “It is possible. The mind is a very powerful thing.”

Rebecca Neff, 61, an informatio­n technology manager at a mortgage company, thinks she caught a fairly severe case of COVID-19 last March in Los Angeles and has been paying the price ever since. Although she was never tested and never hospitaliz­ed, she has experience­d chronic gastrointe­stinal problems, shortness of breath, fatigue and brain fog. Her hair fell out and her teeth loosened, she said.

Ms. Neff, who recently moved to Frisco, Texas, said she consistent­ly measured the oxygen level in her blood with a fingertip pulse-oximeter and found it to be two or three points below normal for many months. Stress would trigger flare-ups, she said, as would wine and some foods. Her dreams were “more bizarre” than she has ever experience­d.

One shot of Pfizer’s vaccine on March 8 has changed all that, she said.

“My head is clearer in the last week than it’s been the whole entire year,” she said. “So even though I felt better, I didn’t realize how much I was off.”

Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologi­st at Yale University, said immunizati­on is likely to reduce the chances of long-term COVID-19, based on evidence that shows that vaccines help prevent the disease.

“Vaccines will generate good antibody and T-cell responses. They have been already shown to significan­tly reduce infection, both symptomati­c and asymptomat­ic,” she said.

Ms. Iwasaki said she understand­s that it can be “a bit scary to get the vaccine when you are already feeling ill from long COVID. However, more people appear to benefit from the vaccine than get worse with the vaccine.” She stressed that the benefit of vaccinatio­n outweighs the risks, and that vaccines also “will greatly reduce the risk of reinfectio­n.”

Michael S. Saag, a professor of medicine and infectious disease at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who took part in the NIH workshop, said he, too, is trying to make sense of the conflictin­g signals.

“I’m intrigued and puzzled by the reports and curious to see whether this pans out to be real and, if so, why is it happening.”

Several theories have emerged, although researcher­s have barely begun to explore them.

Dr. Deeks noted that people who are infected with varicella zoster, the virus that causes chickenpox and shingles, may harbor the pathogen in their nervous systems for years. That offers a potential comparison with the coronaviru­s vaccine; the varicella zoster immunizati­on “doesn’t prevent new infections but takes care of the infection that’s there,” he said.

The COVID-19 vaccine could be triggering an immune response sufficient to eliminate any viral holdouts. “You put one and one together and you can say, ‘OK, you know, this is plausible,’ ” Dr. Deeks said.

Dr. Saurabh Mehandru, a gastroente­rologist at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital who studies the immune system, and colleagues found that coronaviru­s cells infected the lining of the small intestine, according to studies they published in the journals Nature in January and Gastroente­rology in March.

But he said it is plausible that viral remnants in the gut could lead to a “low degree of inflammati­on, which could drive some of the features associated with persistenc­e of symptoms. This is the speculatio­n.”

In a post on the blog Elemental, Ms. Iwasaki proposed three possible reasons vaccines might improve people’s symptoms: T cells, boosted by the vaccine, could eliminate a viral reservoir; a heightened immune response could clear any lingering virus fragments; or the vaccine may “divert autoimmune cells,” if long-lasting symptoms are the result of an inappropri­ate autoimmune response.

These are all working hypotheses.

“We will try some animal models to test this,” she said, “but my hope is that more and more people will be engaged in this research.”

 ?? Sarah Blesene/The Washington Post ?? Arianna Eisenberg endured long-haul COVID-19 for eight months. But 36 hours after receiving the second shot of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine last month, Ms. Eisenberg said, her symptoms were gone and haven't returned.
Sarah Blesene/The Washington Post Arianna Eisenberg endured long-haul COVID-19 for eight months. But 36 hours after receiving the second shot of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine last month, Ms. Eisenberg said, her symptoms were gone and haven't returned.

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