A 12-year-old British girl still needs a feeding tube two years after prolonging Covid-19 since December 2021.
tillie adamsfrom east London, he spent weeks in hospital as his health deteriorated, reported the British newspaper The Mirror.
But because Tillie’s weight dropped below 80 pounds and she didn’t get better, doctors eventually diagnosed her with post-covid infection syndrome, or prolonged covid.
Since last summer of that year, the 12-year-old girl needs a nasogastric tube to provide you with the nutrients your body needs.
Although he may eat small meals, it causes him chronic pain, he told the UK outlet. Now, as he enters his third year of battling the long-term effects, docs they are not sure if he will ever recover completely.
“I want to be more like my normal self. I wanna get my tube out, I want to go back to normalTillie told the Mirror.
She told the Mirror her story: ‘It’s hard for me because I’m trying to learn that I can’t do everything I used to do. I didn’t think it would last this long, I thought it would only be a couple of months. Sometimes I think that I’m getting better, but then I get sick and this makes me regress“.
Her mother, Kelly, 44, said her daughter is a “different girl” than before, referring to how the disease is affecting her. “It was thought so I was only going to have the tube for six weeks initially,” the mother told the outlet.
“I just think about whether we’ll ever go back to how we were before. That’s always on my mind. I always ask the doctors, but all they can say is ‘let’s hope we make it.'” Still we don’t know how long it will take until it gets better. They still have no answers to this case,” the devastated mother continued, pointing to the moment the specialists treating Tillie are living through.
A separate study published in March 2022 found that one in four children with Covid symptoms develop ‘long Covid’. The study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, pooled data from 21 previous studies conducted in Europe, Asia, Australia and South America.
For Tillie, her long COVID means she just can go to school three days a week, while the other two studied from home. “I see my friends a lot, but I want to do what they’re doing, but it’s too much for me,” she said, and also said her pain doesn’t allow her to pursue one of her great passions: the skating.
“It is very difficult for her to realize that even if she is having a good day, there is no point in doing a lot and then suffering tomorrow. It took her a while to figure out that she needed a healthy balance,” Tillie’s mother said.
Last year, Tillie opened an instagram account to document his arduous journey and has amassed more than 17,000 followers, some of whom are also battling the condition.
“I try to help them as much as possible because I know what they are going through. I realize I’m not alone,” Tillie said. “I want to raise awareness, I want people to know that it’s not just about adults,” she concluded.
These patients can test positive for months or even years with the infection. “I rumble all the time”many specialists say.
Infections can pose a serious threat because about half of patients also have persistent symptoms, such as lung inflammation.
Persistent Covid-19 and long Covid-19: differences
“In the long Covid it is generally assumed that the virus has been cleared from the body, but the symptoms persist,” explained researcher Luke Snell, an infectious disease expert at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust in London. “in persistent infection, this represents a continuous and active replication of the virus”.
In each test the researchers gave to patients, they analyzed the genetic code of the virus to make sure it was the same strain and that people hadn’t contracted Covid-19 more than once. In any case, genetic sequencing showed the virus changed over time, mutating as it adapted.
The mutations were similar to those that later developed into the generalized variants, Snell said, although none of the patients generated new mutations that became variants of concern. There is also no evidence that they spread the virus to others.
The person with the longest known infection tested positive in 2020, was treated with the antiviral drug remdesivir, and died in 2021. Investigators did not specify the cause of death, but clarified that the patient had other illnesses.
Researchers are hopeful that more treatments will be developed to help people with persistent infections beat the virus.
“We must be aware that there are some people who are more susceptible to these problems.such as persistent infection and severe disease,” Snell said.
Although cases of persistent infection are rare, experts say there are many people with weak immune systems who are vulnerable to severe Covid-19 and are trying to stay safe since governments lifted restrictions and people started taking off their masks. And it’s not always easy to know who they are, said Dr. Wesley Long, a pathologist at the hospital. Houston Methodistfrom Texas.
Source: Clarin
Mark Jones is a world traveler and journalist for News Rebeat. With a curious mind and a love of adventure, Mark brings a unique perspective to the latest global events and provides in-depth and thought-provoking coverage of the world at large.