Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live
Hair, eyes, skin infections: Is Covid affecting us in more ways?
MUMBAI: In the first week of July, a 45-year-old woman walked into Tardeo’s Bhatia Hospital with a lump of hair packed into a zip-locked plastic bag. The Parel resident had recovered from Covid-19 in May, but since then she was troubled by severe hair fall. “I wanted you to believe that I am not exaggerating. I am losing enormous amounts of hair every day,” she told the consultant dermatologist, Dr Saurabh Shah.
Patients who have a severe form of Covid-19, take several months to recover fully, battling fatigue, aches and breathing difficulty. However, the viral infection is leaving its mark in more ways than we know. Patients are struggling with sudden and severe hair loss, skin infections and eye ailments. Medical experts have gradually started linking these conditions to after-effects of Covid-19.
Often, after a major illness like typhoid, jaundice, dengue, malaria or sometimes due to crash diets and fasting, people experience severe hair loss that needs medical attention.
“We call this condition chronic telogen effluvium— hair loss triggered by certain stressers,” said Shah, who treated the 45-year-old Parel resident with a cocktail of tricho-nutrients such as biotin, copper, iron, zinc, magnesium, selenium among others. Tricho nutrients are supplements prescribed to maintain healthy hair.
In addition to supplements, the woman was also treated with platelet rich plasma (PRP) therapy, which involved injecting her platelets into the scalp to accelerate the hair growth.
Of the 20-odd people with hair loss-related complaints that Shah consults daily, nearly 10 to 12 have a Covid-19 history. He said the number ncreased during the second wave when Covid-19 affected a huge number of people.
Doctors said that men and women have been equally affected with post-Covid hair loss. Many patients are in the age group of 25 to 30, without any underlying ailments like thyroid or diabetes, suddenly losing lumps of hair. “On a positive note, those with a Covid history are responding to hair loss treatment sooner, as compared to let’s say a typhoid patient who would need treatment for several weeks,” said Shah.
Hives, herpes zoster
Doctors are treating a range of skin infections such as red patches, hives (itchy, raised bumps), blisters among others. These skin conditions have been noticed in patients freshly diagnosed with Covid-19 or in the post-Covid phase. Some patients have complained of skin infections just before testing positive for the disease and most respond to anti-histamine drugs.
In Mumbai, some doctors have seen increased cases of herpes zoster — a painful rash caused by the reactivation of varicella-zoster virus — in patients with Covid-19 history.
“This is the virus that causes chickenpox. It remains dormant in the patient’s body and reactivates when the immunity of the person is at its lowest,” said physician Dr Hemant Gupta. “It could be that Covid is precipitating the reactivation,” he said. Shah from Bhatia Hospital, for instance, has seen double the number of herpes zoster patients every month as compared to pre-Covid times. A majority of them have a recent Covid history, he said.
Red eyes, ocular hypertension
In some patients, Covid-19 erupted with conjunctivitis along with other symptoms suggesting that ocular manifestations due to the virus were possible. In many others, Covid-19 and its treatment impacted eyes in newer ways. For instance, a 34-year-old Thane resident who suffered from a severe bout of Covid-19 in April was hospitalised and put on multiple drugs including Remdesivir, steroids and antibiotics. Soon after discharge, the digital entrepreneur began suffering from red eyes and his left eye felt heavy. A thorough ophthalmological consultation revealed that he had developed ocular hypertension — increased pressure in the eye. “A high dose of steroids or long use of steroids could lead to raised pressure in the eye,” said Dr Ragini Parekh, head of the ophthalmology department at the state-run Sir JJ Hospital.
“A lot of Covid-19 patients are put on steroids which may be leading to such problems,” she said. According to Parekh, Covid-19 patients typically suffer from asthenopia or ocular fatigue and could have symptoms like dry or watery eyes, tiredness, sensitivity to light among others.