Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Long COVID persists, but doctors are working to develop treatments

- By Jenna Carlesso CT Mirror reporter Katy Golvala contribute­d to this story.

Six months after her bout with COVID-19, Jannell Roberts still doesn’t feel like herself.

She gets winded walking short distances. She launches into frequent coughing fits and feels her nose running. She can’t focus while reading a book, a frustratin­g ordeal for an avid reader.

“I’m tired all the tim e.I have trouble concentrat­ing,” said Roberts, who lives in West Haven. “I try to keep myself awake, but there are a lot of times in the afternoon or early evening where I’ll just start nodding off. I can’t really focus or I won’t be able to sit still.

“I could be just walking down the hall and all of a sudden, I’ll be out of breath and think, where the heck did that come from ?I shouldn’t be out of breath.”

Nicole Bongiovann­i caught the coronaviru­s early in 2021. More than a year later, the Madison resident is still without her sense of taste and smell. She has a cough that comes and goes, and gone are the nights when she can stay up until midnight watching television. Her new bedtim eis8 p.m.

Bongiovann­i, an aide who cares for people in their homes, went from three clients to two as her exhaustion set in.

“My energy went down. I get tired really easily,” she said. “I begin to cough. I feel like I’m sick when I’m not really sick.” When she finishes work for the day, “all I want is to do is go to sleep.”

Both women have a condition known as long COVID, or post-COVID syndrome, a growing problem in Connecticu­t and elsewhere. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that one in five people under 65 who have had the coronaviru­s experience­d at least one health issue that could be deemed long COVID. For people 65 and older, that figure is higher — one in four.

Other studies have estimated that anywhere from 10 percent to 30 percent of coronaviru­s cases result in long COVID, while a few — including one from the Penn State College of Medicine — say more than half of people who had the disease develop the condition.

In Connecticu­t, providers say 5 percent to 30 percent of cases here lead to long COVID. A CDC analysis of census data show 29.3 percent — nearly a third — of adult COVID survivors in Connecticu­t have experience­d lingering symptoms.

Even on the lower end of estimates nationally, the numbers are staggering. CDC data through February show that nearly 60 percent ofA mericans have been infected with the virus, including three in four children and adolescent­s. That means millions of people in the U.S. could be suffering with symptoms of long COVID.

For some, it is debilitati­ng. Patients can experience shortness of breath, fatigue, brain fog, headaches, cardiac and central nervous system problems, cognitive dysfunctio­n and musculoske­letal issues, among other symptoms, for weeks or months. Some have chronic pain.

Although there is currently no cure, treatment programs have emerged with the aim of managing symptoms and helping people to recover as much as possible. And research is underway to better understand the condition and what interventi­ons might prove effective.

At the sam eti me, medical providers and advocates are trying to raise awareness about long COVID as public health mandates are rolled back and people resume pre-pandemic activities.

“We all have to think about long COVID,” said Dr. Kathleen Mueller, head of the COVID Care Recovery Center at Trinity Health of New England. “I see people who were in excellent health with no complicati­ng conditions before they had COVID, and a number are in a wheelchair. Some people are not able to focus at work and are on disability because of long COVID. It’s unsettling. I do not want this.

“We’re all tired of masks and we’re all tired of social isolation. We’re tired of all of this. And yet, COVID is not gone.”

A growing problem

Long COVID occurs in people with a confirmed or probable case of the virus who develop lingering symptoms and for whom no other diagnosis can explain the symptoms. Those symptoms can last a minimum of four weeks but often go on longer.

Health officials say the condition can grow out of severe or mild cases of the virus. It can even affect some who initially had no COVID symptoms.

For some people, the symptom sco me and go without explanatio­n. Others have suffered consistent­ly since their diagnosis. And still others have seen symptoms stop abruptly, either because of a vaccinatio­n, a booster shot or another reason.

The symptoms are wide ranging. The CDC lists 19 conditions most commonly reported, including fatigue that interferes with daily life, fever, cough, chest pain, anxiety, depression, headache, dizziness, change in taste or smell, stomach pain, diarrhea, joint pain and changes in menstrual cycles — but providers say there are far more. They can be respirator­y, neurologic­al, digestive, musculoske­letal and beyond.

“If you could find one symptom that is not under the banner of long COVID, you’re doing a good job, because the list is enormous,” Mueller said. “The breadth and the depth is just humbling.”

Women who survive COVID are more likely than men to have lingering symptoms, according to a CDC analysis of census data. Hispanic and Black adults were more likely to experience the condition (39.6 percent and 37.8 percent, respective­ly) than white adults (33.8 percent and Asian adults (25.4 percent) who have had the coronaviru­s, the data show.

Bisexual and transgende­r adults were more likely to have experience­d long COVID symptoms than people of other sexual orientatio­ns and gender identities. And 58 percent of adults with disabiliti­es have suffered from ongoing symptoms, the study found.

The CDC analyzed Census Household Pulse Survey data from June 1 to 13.

Long COVID can exacerbate existing health problems. A person with asthma who already has breathing difficulty may find breathing to be even more challengin­g, and someone who already has heart issues can see those problems worsen.

But it can also trigger new issues. A person who has never experience­d brain fog or breathing problems can suddenly have those challenges, providers say.

Anyone can develop long COVID, but in a study published in the journal Cell, researcher­s found four conditions that appear to be correlated with an increased risk of lingering symptoms: the amount of coronaviru­s RNA in a person’s blood early in the infection (an indicator of viral load), the presence of certain autoantibo­dies (antibodies that mistakenly attack tissues in the body), the reactivati­on of Epstein-Barr virus, and having Type 2 diabetes, the New York Times reported.

With a growing number of people getting long COVID, treatment programs have launched in Connecticu­t and elsewhere to help patients manage the symptoms. Health systems such as Trinity Health of New England, Hartford HealthCare, Yale New Haven Health and Bristol Health now have treatment initiative­s.

In many program s,a patient will be assessed and then paired with doctors in a range of specialtie­s. The programs include cardiologi­sts, pulmonolog­ists, neurologis­ts and physical and speech therapists, among others. They also involve practition­ers outside of traditiona­l medicine. For example, acupunctur­ists have been enlisted to help patients with fatigue.

“The best thing we found for fatigue is acupunctur­e,” Mueller said. “Within three to six visits, some people start to get their energy back. Then we touch base again and see how they’re doing, and we gradually increase movement.”

Medication may be prescribed if appropriat­e. Sometimes physical therapy plays a role.

A big part of the initial appointmen­t for long COVID patients is validating the person’s condition. Because evidence of lingering symptoms doesn’t always show up on medical testing and not all physicians are familiar with long COVID, patients have reported being told by doctors that the symptoms are all in their head.

“In our conversati­ons with patients, we find there’s a cathartic release of someone recognizin­g and validating that their symptoms aren’t just anxiety, or that it’s not just going to go away on its own,” said Dr. Andaleeb Shariff, primary care clinical lead for Hartford HealthCare’s COVID Recovery Center. “That can be half of their healing process.”

“Just having somebody listen to your story and understand that you’re not making it up, that you’re not just looking to avoid going back to work, is important,” Mueller added. “You can’t go back to work because you’re so debilitate­d from this illness. That’s been one of the great gifts we’ve been able to do in the recovery center is help people understand these are longterm effects of an infection, and it’s not all in their heads.”

As more people seek treatment for the condition, advocates say it’s important for doctors not to be dismissive of patients’ symptoms and to understand how long COVID works.

“Studies have found long COVID is more prevalent in women, and research shows that women are often less believed about health issues that aren’t really obvious,” said Lisa Freeman, executive director of the Connecticu­t Center for Patient Safety. “I’m concerned that they’re not being taken as seriously when they present with long COVID symptoms. It has to do with a lot of societal and preconceiv­ed notions. But I think we need to make sure that all patients are given the respect and the regard for what they’re saying.”

Advocates also called for a more robust public education campaign around long COVID, something state officials said could happen in the fall before an expected winter surge.

“This is one of the risks of what is happening as our society is opening. For some people, because they’ve heard anecdotes of COVID being relatively mild or not as severe, it is safe in many people’s minds to take calculated risks and go on with life,” said Dr. Manisha Juthani, Connecticu­t’s public health commission­er. “But for some people, I do think they feel they were unaware of what the potential consequenc­es could be. COVID is not new. In fact, we heard about long COVID within the first several months of the pandemic, and people have known about it. But I do think many people are not aware that it may still be a possibilit­y at this point.”

Long COVID doesn’t have a precise definition, and research into the condition is still underway. Juthani said she would continue to watch for new informatio­n and could envision broader messaging on the topic in the fall.

“There is informatio­n out there that the CDC and others have provided, but I’m looking for a little bit more to really try to help people understand what that risk is. The more I can understand that and qualify that, the better we can explain it to people,” she said. “The risks of long COVID are something I would want to really make people aware of as we go into another wave, when risks will be higher again.”

An issue for children, too

Adults aren’t the only ones experienci­ng long COVID. In Connecticu­t, pediatrici­ans and health care systems are devoting more resources to kids with lingering coronaviru­s symptoms.

Connecticu­t Children’s Medical Center had a “soft” launch of its long COVID program six months ago. Since then, physicians have seen about 50 kids believed to have the condition, although not all turned out to have it, said Dr. Juan Salazar, physician-in-chief at Connecticu­t Children’s.

Symptoms in children include fatigue, poor physical endurance, difficulty concentrat­ing, trouble breathing, muscle pain, chronic headaches, heart palpitatio­ns, gastrointe­stinal issues, sleep disorders, changes in smell or taste, and lightheade­dness upon standing.

Estimates on how many children are developing long COVID vary widely. One study released in March says that one in four children and teens who contract the coronaviru­s and have symptoms develop lingering problems. In 2021, the New York Times quoted an official from the National Institutes of Health who said 11% to 15% of infected youths could end up with the condition.

Pediatrici­ans say long COVID appears to be less common in children than adults.

“For kids, it’s been a smaller number,” said Dr. Jody Terranova, a pediatrici­an with UConn Health and president-elect of the Connecticu­t chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “But kids aren’t necessaril­y going to verbalize some of their symptoms. The adults and the doctors have to be paying attention and recognize that when a kid is having trouble in school, maybe it’s not ADHD, maybe it’s not something else. Maybe it is related to their COVID. So making that connection, I think, is going to be the hardest part.

“Where adults may be more able to advocate for themselves or recognize that they had COVID and now they aren’t thinking as clearly and have that brain fog, kids might not know what’s happening. It’s going to be a little bit of a challenge, and we have to be proactive in asking about that.”

If children aren’t able to play as long as they typically would, have shortness of breath or are having difficulty focusing in school, those could be signs of long COVID, Terranova said.

“Some kids are having prolonged headaches, some are having trouble concentrat­ing in school,” she said. For others, “while playing outside with their friends, you could see they weren’t keeping up with their peers.”

Long COVID programs for children are similar to those for adults. At Connecticu­t Children’s, for example, specialist­s are brought in to treat a constellat­ion of symptoms in kids.

“Specialist­s who treat these patients could include a psychologi­st, developmen­tal pediatrici­ans, a cardiologi­st, a physical therapist or a rheumatolo­gist,” Salazar said. “This is where we put our entire children’s hospital to work to try to solve a situation that could be attributed to COVID.”

Connecticu­t Children’s will soon be part of a large study, funded by the National Institutes of Health and run through New York University, that tracks trends and identifies treatment for people with long COVID. The hospital plans to enroll as many as 200 children over the next two years who are willing to participat­e in the study and also receive treatment for their lingering symptoms.

“We’re gearing up to do a far more robust launch of the program,” Salazar said. “We’ll be enrolling kids who have COVID-19 and their parents and doing long-term follow-up to see who develops complicati­ons, what are the complicati­ons, and how do we best treat them .… That will give us a much better chance of identifyin­g patterns.”

The broader program is expected to launch at Connecticu­t Children’s in the next month or two.

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