The Oklahoman

Millions of Americans can’t shake COVID-19

Doctors puzzle over why, how to ease long-hauler misery

- Karen Weintraub

As COVID-19 swept across the country early last year, the primary concern was for the dying. So far, the pandemic has cost at least 656,000 American lives.

But there are others – as many as 12 million and counting – who took months and months to recover, or are still struggling. These “long-haulers” suffer from what’s called Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection, better known simply as long COVID.

Edwin “Avi” Luna was a suit salesman in the Brooklyn borough of New York City when he came down with COVID-19 early in the pandemic. He loved joking around with his children and was passionate about kicking around a soccer ball in his spare time.

Now, Luna, 33, is a double-lung transplant recipient, slowly regaining his strength. His humor is back, but he struggles to climb the steep stairs to the apartment he shares with his parents, wife and two kids.

During nearly 11 months in the hospital, including all of summer 2020 in a coma, he lost more than 40% of his body weight. “I went from an Oompa-Loompa to a stick figure,” he said. Luna makes light of his several near-death experience­s but cries, too, when telling his tale.

Ronald Rushing Sr., 46, thought he had a cold when he came down with a sore throat, cough and a headache July 27, 2020. A grocery store manager living in Southern Pines, North Carolina, Rushing’s district manager sent him home to get better.

More than a year later, he’s still not. Pain shoots through his head from the moment he opens his eyes in the morning until he closes them at night.

Working his old job remains out of the question. Though his company extended his employment so he still has health insurance, he was replaced as store manager. The father of six doesn’t blame his bosses, but without that job he questions his identity and self-worth.

“On a daily basis, I feel alone and I feel like no one cares,” said Rushing, who hopes telling his story will help others feel less isolated and restore his sense of purpose. “It’s become the majority of my life, because I’ve lost everything else.”

With the delta variant raging and the U.S. enduring its fourth coronaviru­s surge, the USA TODAY Network spoke this summer with dozens of experts and patients to understand the consequenc­es of long-haul COVID-19.

Over the next five days, we will share stories of families desperate to regain what they’ve lost and scientists doing everything they can to help.

Many of the people we talked with help run or participat­e in long-haul clinics, which have popped up in nearly every state, designed to address the wide range of symptoms that commonly include fatigue, brain fog and breathless­ness.

Others are trying to unravel the economic impacts of COVID-19, to figure out how to spend the $1.15 billion Congress allocated last December to address long COVID.

Still more are delving into different aspects of the medical condition, providing insights that will lead to new informatio­n and eventually lessen its burden. Studies are published every week revealing aspects of the lingering disease and potential ways to treat it.

Dozens of patient support groups have sprung up, including Survivor Corps, with 150,000 members, and the covidCAREg­roup, with more than 45,000. The Facebook group BIPOC Women Long COVID-19 Support Group focuses on women of color, another with a self-explanator­y name is the Patient-Led Research Collaborat­ive.

And then there are the patients. They struggle with a huge range of problems, compounded by the emotional drain of not getting better. Some can’t even prove they had COVID-19 because testing was unavailabl­e or hard to get when they were infected. In other cases, they are told, it’s all in their head.

They’re all waiting for help and for a better understand­ing of just what is making them so miserable.

“I do very much understand the feeling where your body is feeling a bit out of control and none of the doctors know why,” said Dr. Stuart Katz, principle investigat­or of NYU Langone’s Clinical Science Core, which has been tasked by the federal government with leading the long COVID-19 research activities of clinical sites around the country.

Katz, a cardiologi­st, had symptoms for months after his own infection in December. “Obviously it’s very, very disturbing,” he said.

He hopes including patient experience­s in the team’s work will bring more clarity more quickly.

Particular­ly early on, some doctors questioned whether long-haul symptoms were anything more than just anxiety after being ill. But in part because so many caregivers like Katz felt the symptoms themselves, most now are convinced.

“I’m sure that these (symptoms) are real and I’m sure we will someday understand them, but it sure is confusing right now,” said Dr. Julie Gerberding, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who knows several people suffering from longhaul COVID.

Viral illnesses have long been known to occasional­ly trigger prolonged symptoms, but the scale of those with long-haul symptoms is unpreceden­ted, she said, as are the range of problems and the devastatio­n of lives.

“This clearly is different and exaggerate­d and more pronounced and more frequent than anything I’ve ever seen before,” said Gerberding, now executive vice president and chief patient officer at Merck & Co. “We will be able to understand this. It’s just not happening fast enough to be helpful to the people who are currently afflicted.”

The good news is most people will recover eventually, said Dr. Ravindra Ganesh, medical director of the post-COVID clinic at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

Medical treatment may be able to shorten symptoms, he and others said. But it’s also possible the interventi­ons don’t matter and everyone who gets better would have anyway. It’s too soon to be sure.

In the meantime, said Dr. Steven Flanagan, a specialist in rehabilita­tion medicine at NYU Langone Health in New York, “anybody who’s had COVID, regardless of your race, whatever your socioecono­mic status is, you need help.”

Not even the same person

The medical system didn’t do much for middle school English teacher Chimére Smith,39, of Baltimore, as she fought COVID-19 and then sought help for the unrelentin­g brain fog and pain that followed.

People of color, whose communitie­s were hardest hit by COVID-19, often face additional challenges as they try to recover. Smith, who is Black, said she was turned away repeatedly when she tried to get help for her initial infection, which began March 22, 2020.

Short of breath, feverish, unable to pass waste and losing her vision, she says she watched white people across the emergency room hallway treated as if they were positive for COVID-19, while her symptoms were dismissed as merely acid reflux and dry eye.

“This is all in your head,” she said she was told. “It made me sicker. I was humiliated. I was ashamed.”

It took until this summer, 15 months after her infection, for a doctor to finally note in Smith’s medical record that she was presumed to have had COVID-19.

Like Smith, many people of color had a harder time getting diagnosed with the virus than white people, particular­ly early in the pandemic. It can be harder for them to access care for long-haul symptoms, said Dr. Amy Kontorovic­h, a genetic cardiologi­st at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

“I don’t think there are any groups that are geneticall­y predispose­d,” she said. “But I wouldn’t dismiss the possibilit­y that we’re not seeing even representa­tion of people who are affected in more marginaliz­ed communitie­s because of issues like access.”

Latino communitie­s were devastated by COVID-19 infections, so they are likely to represent a high number of longhauler­s as well. “It is the Latino community that is projected to carry the biggest burden,” said Noreen Sugrue, director of research for the nonprofit Latino Policy Forum.

“We’re losing, I hate to say a generation, but certainly a significant number,” added Sylvia Puente, the forum’s president and CEO. More than 1 in 11 Latinos in her home state of Illinois has had COVID-19, and the death rate has been higher in her community than any other.

Many are now unable to return to the two or three jobs they used to hold, either because of their own symptoms or because the virus unraveled their safety net – a grandmothe­r who can no longer care for her grandchild­ren, for instance.

The Latino Policy Forum is leading an investigat­ion into the long-term social and economic consequenc­es of COVID-19 in the Latino community, Sugrue said. “A lot of people have started picking up on this.”

It’s important to create dedicated studies, because people of color may have distinct issues, said Marina Del Rios, an emergency room doctor and associate professor at the University of Illinois Chicago.

The signs of heart attack were missed for years in women because most heart attack studies were in men. Del Rios worries the same thing will happen to minority population­s if research into long-haulers focuses mainly on those who seek care.

“Just like we’re all in to prevent COVID, we should be all in to understand what the consequenc­es are for all of us,” Del Rios said.

Abigail Echo-Hawk, executive vice president at the Seattle Indian Health Board, said she’s “deeply concerned” by the lack of data on longhaul COVID-19 in the Native American and Alaska Native population­s, who are 31⁄2 more likely to be diagnosed with COVID-19 than non-Hispanic whites.

“Anecdotall­y, I am hearing story after story after story that is related to long-haul COVID, yet I am seeing no meaningful efforts to include American Indians and Alaska Natives in research studies,” said Echo-Hawk, also director of the Urban Indian Health Institute. “Since western research began, we’ve been underrepre­sented within clinical trial research studies and we’re seeing that happen again.”

It’s also hard to track these population­s in electronic medical records, because many fail to collect appropriat­e racial informatio­n, she said, which means there will be fewer resources for her community going forward. “What we’re going to see is disparitie­s grow as a result,” she said. “I’m terrified of what could happen.”

Back in Baltimore, Smith, who used to dream of becoming a school principal, is coping with her new reality. After COVID-19 she was diagnosed with a painful inflammatory condition in her brain stem, the area that regulates involuntar­y activities, such as heartbeat and breathing. It’s left her with brain fog, spinal pain, vertigo and migraines.

“Some days it feels like there are five rubber bands tightly wrapped around my skull,” she said. “I was a wordsmith. Now I can’t even think of words to say.”

She fills her empty hours lobbying on behalf of Black long-haul COVID-19 patients. She says she’ll never be able to inspire young people with Shakespear­e again.

“I can’t even be who I really was,” she said. “I’m not even the same woman or person.”

What long-haul COVID looks like

COVID-19 is known to affect every organ system in the body, from circulatio­n to the skin.

In a detailed, though not yet peer-reviewed study of 107 long-haul patients, about 20% to 25% showed lung damage, blood clots, heart failure or similar symptoms caused by their initial infection, said Mayo’s Ganesh.

Current treatments are usually directed first at problems like these that show up on medical tests, and then at the most bothersome symptoms – but there’s no standard therapy for tiredness, and lung, brain and cardiac scans often come up clean.

“Doctors are completely lost,” said Rushing, who has had a slew of tests including two MRIs and been put on “medicine after medicine,” all to no avail. “It doesn’t make any of us feel any better to know that they’re lost.”

Long-haul patients seem to skew female and younger – in their 30s and 40s rather than the older people who had more severe COVID-19 infections, said Dr. Zijian Chen, an endocrinol­ogist and medical director of the Center for Post-COVID Care at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

Of the first 7,500 people who responded to an online survey about longhaul COVID symptoms, 83% were women and 90% were white, said Shruti Mehta, who is helping run the study at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“As far as I know there is no data to support a biological reason for this, white women being at higher risk for long COVID,” said Mehta, an infectious disease epidemiolo­gist. “Are we seeing this trend because this disproport­ionately affects white women or is it because they are more vocal, more likely to engage in research efforts? We don’t know the answer yet.”

There are no good numbers for how many people have lingering symptoms after a COVID-19 infection, but scientists say as many as 30% of those infected are long-haulers. A recent study out of China found that half of those who had COVID-19 early on report at least one continuing symptom a year later, and their overall health isn’t as good as those who escaped infection.

In one survey of nearly 4,000 people, more than 90% said they still had symptoms eight months after their bout with COVID-19. Over 45% said they had reduced their work hours since their infection and an additional 22% said they were unable to work at all.

The survey recorded 203 symptoms ranging from the most common – exhaustion, breathless­ness, brain fog, pain, headaches, gastrointe­stinal problems, racing heart – to the bizarre, including hallucinat­ions, painfully swollen toes, and full-body convulsion­s.

Roughly 70% of COVID-19 patients lose their sense of smell during the infection, and for as many as 30% it can take months to get back. When smell does return it can be disordered and disorienti­ng, with everyday foods now repulsive and familiar places and people suddenly seeming foreign.

It’s also a scary prospect. The nerve cells that sense smell go directly to the brain. If they are affected, other parts of the brain likely are, too, said Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency room physician and researcher at the Brown University School of Public Health.

“That’s a direct attack on the brain,” she said. “It is inconceiva­ble to me that this virus will not have long-term effects for a portion of people ... but I also fully expect that we’ll find treatments.”

It’s too early to say whether the delta variant, which causes very high viral loads, will increase the risk of longhaul COVID-19. Not enough time has passed since delta began taking over at the end of May.

The causes of longhaul COVID-19 remain unclear.

“This virus does something strange to the immune system and the autonomic system that we just don’t fully understand yet,” Ranney said.

In some people, bits of the virus that causes COVID-19 may linger in the body triggering symptoms. In others, the immune system may not be able to quiet back down after revving up to fight COVID-19. There also is a possibilit­y the virus may reactivate an old pathogen that’s been dormant in the body for years.

For about 20% of longhauler­s, a COVID-19 vaccine seems to improve symptoms, Mayo Clinic’s Ganesh said, suggesting the shot may be “rebooting” the immune system in some patients. Or maybe, Ranney said, the vaccine triggers an immune response that somehow straighten­s out whatever went awry during COVID-19.

Some, unfortunat­ely, feel worse after their shots. Rushing and many like him are afraid getting vaccinated will exacerbate their symptoms. “If I feel any worse than I do now, I would not want to be on this earth,” he said. “I couldn’t.”

The most desperate option

Heidi Ferrer, of Santa Monica, California, felt like she had tried everything to treat her longhaul symptoms. But nothing helped combat the exhaustion, body aches, foot pain, racing heart, sleeplessn­ess and frequent diarrhea that made it impossible for her to leave the house.

Her March 2020 bout with COVID-19 was relatively mild and she checked none of the boxes of those presumed at highest risk. Just 50, Ferrer was trim and healthy. The successful screenwrit­er and blogger ate organic food, walked 90 minutes a day and hadn’t had a drink in 31⁄ years.

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By mid-July, though, her feet hurt so much, it was like walking on shards of glass.

She was still learning to cope with the unrelentin­g pain the following March when she got vaccinated against COVID-19.

Then, the full-body tremors began. She’d shake so much, she couldn’t carry a glass of water up the stairs, her husband said. Internal tremors lasted for hours and kept her from sleeping at night.

Her husband Nick Guthe used to kid Ferrer about the size of her Kindle bill, but she no longer had the attention span to read a single book.

“I can’t walk. I can’t travel. I can’t even read a book. What’s left?” Guthe remembers her saying. “It was hard to argue with her.”

On May 2, she finished writing her memoir – including the story of her recovery from alcoholism and the couple’s struggle for proper care of their now 14-year-old son’s spinal problems. She died by suicide May 22, after scrubbing her computer’s history, so no one would see what she’d been searching in those final days.

Her organs were transplant­ed on what would have been her 51st birthday. As painful as it is to recall the suffering of his wife of 28 years, Guthe said he’s committed to sharing her story to hopefully protect others.

“The one thing Heidi said to me was, ‘Let the world know what happened to me,’ ” said Guthe, who is seeking a publisher for her memoir. “It’s been very therapeuti­c to direct my grief to help save other people.”

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 ?? PHOTOS BY MICHELLE HANKS/USA TODAY ?? Edwin “Avi” Luna with his wife Mayra and children, Gabriella, 9, and Andrew, 11. For 11 months in the hospital, Mayra continued to visit her husband daily while fighting through the emotional toll of watching him suffer that weighed on her.
TOP: Since the onset of his debilitati­ng headaches due to COVID-19, Ronald Rushing Sr., 46, has almost been permanentl­y stuck at home, mainly laying down in bed. Rushing says he will continue to search for a treatment, but has also accepted the fact that this may be his life from here on out.
PHOTOS BY MICHELLE HANKS/USA TODAY Edwin “Avi” Luna with his wife Mayra and children, Gabriella, 9, and Andrew, 11. For 11 months in the hospital, Mayra continued to visit her husband daily while fighting through the emotional toll of watching him suffer that weighed on her. TOP: Since the onset of his debilitati­ng headaches due to COVID-19, Ronald Rushing Sr., 46, has almost been permanentl­y stuck at home, mainly laying down in bed. Rushing says he will continue to search for a treatment, but has also accepted the fact that this may be his life from here on out.

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