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Lingering symptoms among COVID-19 'long-haulers' remain a mystery

Chandra Pasma's family contracted presumed cases of the illness in March, but they continue to experience symptoms. Researchers are trying to figure out why.

Chandra Pasma's family still suffering symptoms months after contracting presumed cases of the illness

Chandra Pasma and her husband Matt Helleman say they first got sick with COVID-19 in mid-March, along with their three children. Months later, they're still experiencing symptoms. (Supplied by Chandra Pasma)

Chandra Pasma'sseven-year-old daughter still has a cough, and it's not goingaway.

Her other two children also have symptoms that come and go, as doshe and her husband, months after the Ottawa family contracted presumed cases of COVID-19.

They're among a group being classified as "long-haulers," people who contracted the illness weeks or even months ago, and continue to experience symptoms long after the virus itself has become undetectable in their bodies.

Everybody else was getting over it and we weren't.- Chandra Pasma

Pasma's family began experiencing symptoms in Marcheverything from the usual sore throat, cough, feverand fatigue, to symptoms considered unusual at the time, such as conjunctivitis, or pink eye, and abdominal cramps.

At the time, testing wasn't available to the familybut a doctor told them they likely had COVID-19.

"We weren't that concerned at first because they said that kids did not get seriously ill," she told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning.

Symptoms persisting

But two of her three kids did get very sick.

"It was hard to see them be that sick. I don't think I've ever seen them be that sick, but at that pointwe were still feeling really hopeful that it didn't affect kids very badly, and that all the reports were that if you had a case of COVID that didn't require hospitalization, it would be really short and in about two weeks we could all count on being better again."

The problem is some of those symptoms have never really gone away, and the family has even experienced some new ones.

"It has been frustrating at times," Pasma said. "In the first month, when there was literally no talk of long COVID symptoms, it felt like we were some kind of anomaly. Our bodies didn't work normally, and everybody else was getting over it and we weren't."

Her kids are supposed to start school next month, but Pasma has chosen to keep them home to learn remotely. She said herfamily can't afford to live through all that again.

Lingering symptoms a mystery

There are three general hypotheses for what's behind the ongoing symptoms, according to Marc-Andr Langlois, a professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Ottawawho specializes in viruses.

One possibility is that when the virus enters a cell, the body's immune response kicks in and the virus degrades, but part of it getsleft behind. When the cell dies andbreaks apart, it releasessome of that degraded virus backinto the body.

Another hypothesis isSARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the illness,is slow at replicating and could lay dormant for a while, creating a "viral reservoir."

This electron microscope image shows SARS-CoV-2 virus particles, seen here in orange. (NIAID/National Institutes of Health via The Associated Press)

"Viruses are very good at this," Langlois said, pointing to both the herpes simplex virus and HIV, which is "notoriously good" at creating viral reservoirs, making it especially difficult to cure. HIV can go into hiding for years before all of a sudden reactivating, he said.

A third possibility is that the body's immune response goes into overdrive, creating a chronic or autoimmune condition.

Langlois said researchers are hoping to test more long-haulers to find out what may be causing their ongoing symptoms.

"Being infected and recovering is only part of the story there. There might be some long-term effects from getting the virus," he said.

"It is really a disease that seems to have long-term effects on those that have been infected, and therefore you know we really have to do our best to prevent infections."

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning

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