Reacting to a vaccine
Having some or no side effects to a vaccine is a result of how our body calibrates its response to the shot.
FOR some people, the second dose in a Covid-19 vaccination series is causing a stronger reaction and more side effects than the initial dose.
That was also true during the clinical trials.
This may be a concern not only for those experiencing side effects, but also those who are worried a Covid-19 vaccine isn’t working because they didn’t have a reaction.
Mayo Clinic’s Vaccine Research Group head and infectious diseases expert Dr Gregory Poland says everybody is different.
According to him, the first dose teaches your body to recognise the virus and the second shot is kicking the body’s system into gear.
“It’s as if you’ve started a cold car with the first dose,” he says. “The car is idling.
“Then you give it that second dose, and because the car has warmed up, you can put the pedal to the metal and go.”
But everybody is going to respond differently.
“Each of our bodies releases different amounts of chemicals, or immune signals.
“One body might release more than what’s needed, causing more of a response, and someone else’s body might release exactly the right amount.
“It’s what we’ve called the ‘Goldilocks phenomenon’ – not too much, not too little, but just right,” he says.
He notes that a reaction does not mean anything is wrong. “It’s an indication that your body is revved up, prepared to do battle against what it thinks is a foreign invader.”
Also, if people have less of a reaction, it does not mean they aren’t developing an immune response, he emphasises.
Mayo Clinic’s Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation and Distribution Work Group co-chair Dr Melanie Swift says all vaccines could cause some degree of reaction.
The same is true with the Covid19 vaccines.
“They do provoke an immune reaction, which can cause symptoms,” she says.
“That shouldn’t be confused with being harmful or being unsafe.
“It’s what the vaccine is intended to do.”
After you are vaccinated for Covid-19, especially the second dose of the two-dose series, Dr Swift says to be prepared for these possible side effects:
> Muscle aches
> Chills
> Slight fever
> Headache
> Fatigue
Dr Poland reminds people that these side effects generally go away with minimal or no treatment.
And that treating the side effects is easier than treating Covid-19. – Mayo Clinic News Network/ Tribune News Service
Information in this article was accurate at the time of its writing. Due to the fluid nature of the Covid-19 pandemic, scientific understanding, along with guidelines and recommendations, may have changed since the original publication date.