How Long Haul Covid Alters the Immune System

By Liz Szabo, Kaiser Health News

There’s a reason soldiers go through basic training before heading into combat: Without careful instruction, green recruits armed with powerful weapons could be as dangerous to one another as to the enemy.

The immune system works much the same way. Immune cells, which protect the body from infections, need to be “educated” to recognize bad guys — and to hold their fire around civilians.

In some Covid-19 patients, this education may be cut short. Scientists say unprepared immune cells appear to be responding to the coronavirus with a devastating release of chemicals, inflicting damage that may endure long after the threat has been eliminated.

“If you have a brand-new virus and the virus is winning, the immune system may go into an ‘all hands on deck’ response,” said Dr. Nina Luning Prak, co-author of a January study on Covid and the immune system. “Things that are normally kept in close check are relaxed. The body may say, ‘Who cares? Give me all you’ve got.’”

While all viruses find ways to evade the body’s defenses, a growing field of research suggests that the coronavirus unhinges the immune system more profoundly than previously realized.

Some Covid survivors have developed serious autoimmune diseases, which occur when an overactive immune system attacks the patient, rather than the virus. Doctors in Italy first noticed a pattern in March 2020, when several Covid patients developed Guillain-Barré syndrome, in which the immune systems attacks nerves throughout the body, causing muscle weakness or paralysis.

As the pandemic has surged around the world, doctors have diagnosed patients with rare, immune-related bleeding disorders. Other patients have developed the opposite problem, suffering blood clots that can lead to stroke.

All these conditions can be triggered by “autoantibodies” — rogue antibodies that target the patient’s own proteins and cells. In a report published in October, researchers even labeled the coronavirus “the autoimmune virus.”

Although doctors are researching ways to overcome immune disorders in Covid patients, new treatments will take time to develop. Scientists are still trying to understand why some immune cells become hyperactive — and why some refuse to stand down when the battle is over.

Key immune players called “helper T cells” typically help antibodies mature. If the body is invaded by a pathogen, however, these T cells can switch jobs to hunt down viruses, acting more like “killer T cells,” which destroy infected cells. When an infection is over, helper T cells usually go back to their old jobs.

In some people with severe Covid, however, helper T cells don’t stand down when the infection is over, said James Heath, a professor and president of Seattle’s Institute for Systems Biology.

About 10% to 15% of hospitalized Covid patients Heath studied had high levels of these helper T cells, which were still looking for the enemy long after it had been eliminated. He’s now studying whether these overzealous T cells might inflict damage that leads to chronic illness or symptoms of autoimmune disease.

“These T cells are still there months later and they’re aggressive,” Heath said. “They’re on the hunt.”

Friendly Fire

Covid appears to confuse multiple parts of the immune system. In some patients, Covid triggers autoantibodies that target the immune system itself, leaving patients without a key defense against the coronavirus.

In October, a study published in Science led by Rockefeller University’s Jean-Laurent Casanova showed that about 10% of Covid patients become severely ill because they have antibodies against an immune system protein called interferon.

Disabling interferon is like knocking down a castle’s gate. Without these essential proteins, invading viruses can overwhelm the body and multiply wildly.

New research shows that the coronavirus may activate preexisting autoantibodies, as well as prompt the body to make new ones. In the January study, half of the hospitalized Covid patients had autoantibodies, compared with fewer than 15% of healthy people.

Other research has produced similar findings. In a study out in December, researchers found that hospitalized Covid patients harbored a diverse array of autoantibodies.

While some patients studied had antibodies against virus-fighting interferons, others had antibodies that targeted the brain, thyroid, blood vessels, central nervous system, platelets, kidneys, heart and liver, said Dr. Aaron Ring, assistant professor of immunology at Yale School of Medicine.

Similarities With Lupus

Some patients had antibodies associated with lupus, a chronic autoimmune disorder that can cause pain and inflammation in any part of the body. Covid patients rife with autoantibodies tended to have the severest disease, said Ring, who was surprised at the level of autoantibodies in some patients.

“They were comparable or even worse than lupus,” Ring said.

Researchers would like to know if lingering autoantibodies contribute to the symptoms of “long Covid,” which afflicts one-third of covid survivors up to nine months after infection, according to a new study in JAMA Network Open.

“Long haulers” suffer from a wide range of symptoms, including debilitating fatigue, shortness of breath, cough, chest pain and joint pain. Other patients experience depression, muscle pain, headaches, intermittent fevers, heart palpitations and problems with concentration and memory, known as brain fog.

Less commonly, some patients develop an inflammation of the heart muscle, abnormalities in their lung function, kidney issues, rashes, hair loss, smell and taste problems, sleep issues and anxiety.

The National Institutes of Health has announced a four-year initiative to better understand long Covid, using $1.15 billion allocated by Congress.

Ring said he’d like to study patients over time to see if specific symptoms might be explained by lingering autoantibodies.

“We need to look at the same patients a half-year later and see which antibodies they do or don’t have,” he said. If autoantibodies are to blame for long Covid, they could “represent an unfortunate legacy after the virus is gone.”

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Long-Haul Covid Shedding New Light on Chronic Fatigue Illness

By Kevin Cool, Kaiser Health News

Four weeks after San Diego pediatric nurse Jennifer Minhas fell ill with covid-19 last March, her cough and fever had resolved, but new symptoms had emerged: chest pain, an elevated heart rate and crushing fatigue.

Her primary care physician told her she was just anxious, and that none of her other covid patients had those issues. “That wasn’t what I needed to hear,” Minhas said.

At times, she’s been too exhausted to hold up her head. “I was kind of a zombie for months, shuffling around unable to do much of anything.”

The clinical term for the flattening fatigue Minhas describes is “post-exertional malaise.” It is a common symptom among patients who have not recovered from covid. It is also consistent with a standard feature of another chronic illness: myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, or ME/CFS.

ME/CFS patients also report cognitive impairment — “brain fog” — and orthostatic intolerance, in which standing upright produces a racing heart rate and lightheadedness. Minhas has experienced these symptoms, as have many other “long-haulers,” the tens of thousands of post-covid patients who haven’t recovered.

The percentage of covid patients who become long haulers is hard to pin down — in part because many early covid patients were not tested in time to detect the virus. But “long covid” is potentially an enormous problem. A recent study of 1,733 covid patients in Wuhan, China, found three-quarters of them still had symptoms six months after being released from the hospital.

As of January, doctors had documented more than 21 million cases of covid in the United States. “If just 5 percent develop lingering symptoms,’’ — about 1 million cases — “and if most of those with symptoms have ME/CFS, we would double the number of Americans suffering from ME/CFS in the next two years,” Harvard Medical School professor Dr. Anthony Komaroff wrote recently in the Harvard Health Letter.

ME/CFS Linked to Viral Infections

The cause of ME/CFS is unknown, but multiple studies have found it follows acute infections with viruses — everything from the 1918 Spanish flu to Ebola. “A certain percentage of people don’t recover,” said Leonard Jason, a researcher at DePaul University.

Scientists are trying to figure out the mechanisms of the disease and why it develops in certain people and not others. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, ME/CFS shares certain characteristics with autoimmune diseases, in which the immune system attacks healthy tissue in the body. Multiple studies are underway to explore this and other potential causes.

Doctors who specialize in treating ME/CFS are beginning to pivot to long-covid patients. Dr. Peter Rowe, whose clinic at Johns Hopkins is one of the country’s leading centers for ME, has so far seen four long haulers at his practice. “All of them meet the criteria for ME/CFS,” he said.

Despite years of research, there is no biomarker for ME/CFS, so blood tests are ineffective as a diagnostic tool. Rowe’s approach is to tease apart which symptoms may have identifiable causes and treatments, and address those.

One example: A 15-year-old boy Rowe was treating for ME/CFS was so sick that even sitting upright a few hours a day exhausted him and made schoolwork virtually impossible. The boy’s heart rate while lying down was 63; when he stood up it skyrocketed to 113. This effect is known as postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, or POTS.

Rowe knew from interviews with the boy’s mother that he had an extraordinary appetite for salt. So much so that he kept a shaker at his bedside and would regularly sprinkle salt on his hand and lick it off.

Rowe hypothesized that he was dealing with a sodium retention problem. To counter it, he prescribed the steroid fludrocortisone, which promotes sodium resorption in the kidneys. Three weeks later, the boy had recovered so dramatically he was helping a neighbor with a landscaping project, pushing rocks around in a wheelbarrow. “He was a different kid,” Rowe said.

Such a course of treatment would not be applicable in a typical case, Rowe said, “but it does emphasize the potential for patients to get a substantial improvement in their CFS symptoms if we address the orthostatic intolerance.”

ME/CFS Usually Misdiagnosed

Beginning in the 1980s, many doctors treating ME/CFS prescribed a combination of cognitive behavioral therapy and an exercise regimen based on a now discredited assertion that the illness had no biomedical origin. That approach proved ineffective — patients often got demonstrably worse after pushing beyond their physical limits. It also contributed to a belief within the medical establishment that ME/CFS was all in your head, a narrative that has largely been refuted.

“ME/CFS was never a mostly behavioral problem, although it has been cast as that,” Rowe said.

Answers have been slow to arrive, but attitudes about the illness are beginning to change. Advocates of patients point to a 2015 report by the Institute of Medicine that called ME/CFS “a serious, chronic, complex, systemic disease” and acknowledged that many doctors are poorly trained to identify and treat it. The CDC says as many as 90% of the estimated 1 million U.S. patients with ME/CFS may be undiagnosed or misdiagnosed.

The problem is exacerbated by a reluctance to provide health care coverage to patients whose illnesses aren’t easily diagnosed, said Joe Dumit, a medical anthropologist at the University of California-Davis.

“Making patients prove they are not just suffering, but suffering from a documented illness, saves money. So, I worry about the way in which covid long haulers will be treated as the numbers rise.” The best treatment in many cases may be rest or reduced workload, “which translates into some form of disability coverage,” he said.

But since long haulers typically sicken immediately after having had a testable viral infection, perhaps they won’t be disbelieved, Rowe said — after all, their illness “starts as a ‘real’ illness.’’

Long haulers may also help researchers better understand the onset of the illness because they are being studied as their symptoms emerge, while ME/CFS patients often aren’t seen until they’ve been ill for two or more years, he said.

“There’s no question that this legitimizes in many ways the experience of people with ME/CFS who have felt they weren’t believed,” DePaul’s Jason said.

In July, the nonprofit Solve ME/CFS launched an initiative aimed at understanding similarities between long haulers and patients with ME/CFS. Dubbed You+ME and underwritten by the National Institutes of Health, it includes an app that enables registrants to record their symptoms and their effects over time.

Such efforts may further diminish the tendency of doctors to ignore patients’ complaints of symptoms that seem to have no evident cause, said Lauren Nichols, 32, a long hauler with a long list of miseries — everything from severe gastrointestinal problems to shingles in her left eye.

“I was one of those people who falsely believed that if you can’t see the illness it’s psychosomatic,” said Nichols, who helps administer Body Politic, a support group for long-covid patients that has found common cause with the ME/CFS community.

“Now I’m living it,” she said. “If I have one message for doctors, it’s ‘Believe your patients.’”

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Are You a Covid Long-Hauler?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Body aches, fatigue, depression and brain fog -- symptoms that are all too familiar for people living with fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and other chronic pain conditions.

They are also long-term symptoms for many people who become infected with Covid-19 -- so-called “long-haulers” who never quite recover. Estimates vary widely, with one unpublished study finding that up to 80 percent of patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 developed one or more long-term symptoms. Even patients who were never seriously ill from Covid face health problems months after their initial infection.

“My body aches, some of them got better, some of them got worse. I developed pains in my hands and in my wrists,” Covid survivor Catherine Busa told the Associated Press. “I know I’m going to sleep, I just can’t wake up. It’s like I don’t feel refreshed. I feel worse in the morning than I did the night before.”

The long-term symptoms of Covid are not fully understood and there is no cure.  But in an effort to get a better understanding of what’s happening, a self-organized group of long-haulers surveyed nearly 3,800 Covid patients around the world to document their lingering neurological and cognitive problems.    

Only 8 percent of long-haulers said they were sick enough to be admitted to a hospital for Covid-19. But the vast majority reported having fatigue, headaches, cognitive dysfunction, malaise and other health problems six months after the onset of symptoms. Nearly half have been unable to return to work.

“Among the most common symptoms were fatigue, worsening of symptoms after physical or mental activity, shortness of breath, trouble sleeping, and ‘brain fog,’ or difficulty thinking clearly,” National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins said in a recent blog on the survey findings. “A small percentage of respondents, thankfully, seemed to have bounced back from brief bouts of Long COVID, though time will tell whether they have fully recovered.”

What makes the research into long-term Covid symptoms all the more pressing is the growing awareness that long-haulers may be acting as incubators for more communicable and deadly strains of the virus. These viral mutations could make Covid vaccines less effective in the future.

If you’re a long-hauler over the age of 18 who has not fully recovered from Covid, you can take the survey by clicking here. The survey is lengthy and will take between 45-75 minutes to complete. Researchers will use the data to release more studies on long-haul Covid in coming months.

Covid-19 Is More Complex Than We Thought

By Roger Chriss, PNN Columnist

Covid-19 initially seemed like a respiratory illness, with symptoms similar to a nasty flu. But it was quickly recognized as more transmissible and deadly, and with the added feature of being novel, meaning that no one had any natural resistance to it.

Now it is becoming clear that Covid-19 is more complex.

Although some people experience a short course of influenza-like symptoms, others also have neurological problems. According to Neurology Advisor, common symptoms associated with COVID-19 include anosmia and dysgeusia -- the impaired ability to smell or taste normally.

In one case study from Italy, reported on by IFL Science, a young woman had a persistent cough and loss of smell as her first symptoms. MRI results showed a “viral brain invasion” that caused inflammation in her olfactory bulb, the part of the brain involved in the sense of smell. Fortunately, the brain inflammation and other symptoms cleared up 28 days later.

A recent study in The BMJ looked at over 20,000 patients hospitalized with Covid-19 in the UK. Researchers found that many had pre-existing conditions, such as chronic cardiac disease (31%), diabetes without complications (21%), and non-asthmatic chronic pulmonary disease (18%).  

Less than half the patients (41%) made it out of the hospital alive, 26% of them died, and the remaining 34% were still in the hospital when data collection ended, so their outcomes remain to be seen. Being male or obese were associated with a higher risk of death, along with underlying health problems.

Notably, being over the age of 50 was substantially more hazardous than any other comorbidity – meaning the inflection point for risk is 50 years of age, not the oft-cited 65 seen in the U.S.  

Younger People Affected

Washington State is seeing a rapid rise of Covid-19 in young adults. Early in the outbreak, more than two-thirds of patients were older, but between March 1 and May 3, over a third of new cases (39%) were seen in people aged 20 to 39. It is not clear why this is happening, and deaths remain concentrated among people who are older.

Children may be at greater risk than previously thought. The CDC has recognized multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children as a “rare but serious complication” of Covid-19. The condition causes different body parts to become inflamed, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes, and gastrointestinal organs.

Work to find underlying factors that create this complexity is ongoing. A potential role for the ApoE gene has been identified in work by Biobank. The Guardian reports that people with two variants of the gene, which are associated with heart disease and dementia, had more than double the risk of severe Covid-19.

Two key risk factors identified in the United States are ethnicity and socioeconomic status. According to Johns Hopkins, African Americans and other disadvantaged groups are experiencing infection and death rates that are disproportionately high for their share of the total population.

Work to discover the origins of the coronavirus continues. According to Ars Technica, U.S. researchers conducted a detailed analysis of the coronavirus genomes, and found an evolutionary path connecting them mostly with bats, but also with a key contribution from pangolins, an armadillo-like mammal.

All this points to a complicated future for the pandemic. Risks are spread more broadly across the population and symptoms and clinical course are more varied. At present the best we can do is reduce transmission to stay safe and healthy.

Roger Chriss lives with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and is a proud member of the Ehlers-Danlos Society. Roger is a technical consultant in Washington state, where he specializes in mathematics and research. 

Long Term Risks of COVID-19

By Roger Chriss, PNN Columnist

The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is still mysterious. Although some people experience severe or even life-threatening illness, others only have a mild course and may even be asymptomatic. But emerging evidence is showing that recovery from Covid-19 may be more complicated and include long-term health consequences.

The CDC recently expanded its list of Covid-19 symptoms to include chills, repeated shaking with chills, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, and the loss of taste or smell. These symptoms generally start within five days of infection and may last for several weeks before resolution.

Long, Slow Recovery for Some

WebMD reports that for people with severe or critical cases “recovery can take up to six weeks.” Symptoms during that time can include severe fatigue and shortness of breath, making everyday activities like taking a walk or doing laundry a struggle.

Coronavirus patients who were hospitalized describe poor memory and extreme muscle weakness, often needing supplemental oxygen and physical assistance to perform basic daily tasks such as using a bathroom or getting dressed.

For people who require ICU care, recovery can take even longer. NPR reports that some COVID-19 survivors never recover completely and suffer from a condition known as post-intensive-care-unit syndrome, which can cause muscle wasting, organ damage, memory loss and post-traumatic stress syndrome.

"Unfortunately, oftentimes when they're coming off the ventilator, it's not the same person who went on the ventilator," one doctor explained.

All of this is exacerbated for people who are older and have preexisting health conditions. Recovery from any viral illness can be much harder for such people. One mathematical model predicts up to 94,000 Americans aged 65 and older who have hypertension, cardiovascular problems or lung disease could be hospitalized with Covid-19 from April to June, 2020.

Neurological and Cardiac Damage

As often happens with acute viral illness, there are long term consequences with Covid-19. Already there are reports of a link between the coronavirus and Guillain-Barré syndrome, a disorder involving rapid-onset muscle weakness caused by the immune system damaging the peripheral nervous system.

There are also concerns that Covid-19 may cause a wave of neurological illness. Gizmodo reports that on rare occasion, Covid-19 patients have developed brain swelling, strokes and seizures.

Researchers are scrambling to understand the effects of Covid-19 on the brain. Cases of the rare disorder necrotizing hemorrhagic encephalopathy have been reported, according to Wired. Some patients are experiencing loss of smell or taste, though why and for how long remains unclear. Anxiety, insomnia, and possibly even PTSD are being seen as well.

And there is emerging evidence that Covid-19 can also impact heart health. According to Kaiser Health News, a study found cardiac damage in as many as 1 in 5 patients, leading to heart failure and death even for those who have no respiratory problems.

It is clear at this point that Covid-19 is far more serious than a seasonal cold or flu. To date, the pandemic has led to over 55,000 deaths and nearly one million confirmed cases in the U.S.

Hospitals are trying to use artificial intelligence to predict patient outcomes, and researchers are struggling to better understand the full course of the illness. But there is a lot about the coronavirus that remains unknown.

Roger Chriss lives with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and is a proud member of the Ehlers-Danlos Society. Roger is a technical consultant in Washington state, where he specializes in mathematics and research.