Scottish Daily Mail

RACHEL JOHNSON

Hot flush? No, I’ve got Coviditis

- Rachel Johnson

AfEw weeks ago I was at home on Exmoor, cleaning and puppysitti­ng, but mainly scratching and tearing at my left foot which had, overnight, exploded. two of my toes were pink wall’s cocktail chipolatas covered in itchy red bumps.

‘Please get me some athlete’s foot cream or powder, anything!’ I begged my husband via text, hoping he was still patrolling the shops in his black leather gloves (his choice of PPE).

I should explain: he is classified as ‘clinically extremely vulnerable’ following a liver transplant, and so in theory he will be allowed back into circulatio­n for the first time in four months this saturday, august 1.

In fact, the notion that he has been shielding from March 23 is, I’m afraid, a bit ridiculous.

One, the letter telling him to stay in his room self-isolating arrived halfway through lockdown. two, the suggestion that I would wait on him hand and foot, wearing a pinny and a visor, was never going to happen.

three, he had no intention of not going out at all during the most perfect spring there’s ever been, and was, therefore, in our local town of Dulverton, having the strimmer fixed, when I begged him to go to the chemist for me.

when he returned, laden with Mycil products, I anointed the two red, itchy, and swollen toes. after a few days, it settled down and I forgot about it, until I read a story in this paper headlined How to spot Covid toe.

THIs ailment, it explained, was a mysterious rash appearing well after the respirator­y symptoms of Covid-19 in some patients. to me, this was conclusive — and good news.

I announced: ‘well, that proves it! I definitely had Covid toe. (I could swear I had the tell-tale red ‘maculopapu­les’ on two toes of my left foot), which means I did have Covid in february after all when I came back from Venice and was laid out with a streaming cold for five days.’ My husband laughed. It didn’t help when a poll came out revealing that vast numbers were convinced, like me, that they’d had coronaviru­s, despite testing data showing they hadn’t.

after the Covid toe episode, my husband took to groaning scepticall­y whenever I told other people I’d had the virus.

But I stuck to my guns. Can you blame me? we are both pretty sanguine, but the one thing that did worry me was passing it on to him — I was going to London for work — so I’d had regular antigen tests to see if I was an asymptomat­ic carrier (I wasn’t). Plus, if I’d had it already, I reasoned … then I could be immune now, right? all in all, Covid toe seemed the perfect solution to me, and many others who choose to believe they’d had the unpleasant­ness and therefore 1. Couldn’t get it again or 2. Infect others. Meanwhile, I have at least one other unusual symptom, although I can’t find a catchy label for it like ‘Covid toe’. ‘I have a sort of electric… flashing feeling,’ I say, at any opportunit­y. ‘My skin goes all crawly…it’s as if there’s Champagne in my veins and not blood.’ Unlike most men (who are far too frightened to mention it), Ivo insists on telling me it’s the menopause when I bang on about the fizzing and flashing, which makes me bark back, ‘But I can assure you it’s not! that ship has sailed!’ Indeed, so convinced I am that ‘fizzy Legs’ is a weird post-viral syndrome that I am collecting fellow sufferers. In fact, I am thinking of forming a fizzy Legs support network. ‘If you are so convinced you’ve had it,’ my husband suggested ‘why don’t you do an antibody test?’ It seemed like a sensible way forward. Private antibody tests were £100. so I did the fiddly home test and posted it back.

On that agonising cliffhange­r, let us pause to take in ‘the science’.

In search of corroborat­ion, I went straight to the horse’s mouth, ie my friend Kate Bingham, chair of the UK’s Covid19 vaccine taskforce.

she could not pronounce on Covid toe/fizzy Legs, but she did say that even those who had definitely, definitely had the virus weren’t necessaril­y immune for ever.

‘we don’t know and won’t know until we have much more data on reinfectio­ns,’ she said, then added that when it came to world-beating progress on the vaccine we shouldn’t hold our breath either as ‘it’s unlikely one dose will offer any durable protection but two might’.

Very disappoint­ing. for everyone.

as shielding lifts on saturday, the vulnerable may well be encouraged to step outside their homes and the hale and hearty back to the office, but we are all essentiall­y at the same place as we were at the beginning of lockdown: still in limbo. P. s. My antibody test was negative, but I’m still convinced I had it and am, therefore, right!

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 ?? Pictures: MARK HARRISON. SAMIR HUSSEIN/ WIREIMAGE ?? SUSANNA REID IS AWAY
Pictures: MARK HARRISON. SAMIR HUSSEIN/ WIREIMAGE SUSANNA REID IS AWAY

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