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Possible symptoms of long COVID

A persistent dry cough and loss of taste and smell are two of the most common symptoms associated with COVID-19, but now another 200 problems as diverse as hallucinations, inability to yawn or cry and decreased penis or testicle size have been identified as symptoms of the long-term version of the virus, dubbed long COVID.

A study by a team of researchers at University College London (UCL), who all have or had long COVID themselves suggests it may be causing more symptoms than previously thought. The study’s first author, Hannah Davis, explains: “The entire team is made up of long COVID patients, which is what makes us unique and allowed us to identify even the less publicly known symptoms that long COVID patients experience.

“Most people don’t realise how multi-systemic long COVID symptoms are, and how most patients experience dozens of symptoms across multiple organ systems.”

Read: Fears over long-term effects of COVID

Ms Davis, who’s had bad cognitive dysfunction, memory loss, and postural tachycardia (super-high heart rate after standing) as a result of long COVID, says there’s currently no biomarker (a molecule that confirms the presence of a particular virus or disease) for the condition.

But until one is found, she stresses: “Long COVID is actually surprisingly recognisable given the large number of new symptoms patients experience, the multi-systemic nature of these symptoms, and the recognisable symptoms – such as post-exertional malaise – that aren’t common in other illnesses.”

The UCL study used data from 3762 people from 56 countries and identified 203 long COVID symptoms in 10 organ systems. It found the most common symptoms were fatigue, post-exertional malaise (the worsening of symptoms after physical or mental exertion), and cognitive dysfunction (brain fog). The authors are now calling for a national screening program for anyone who thinks they have long COVID.

And while this study did not estimate how common the condition is overall, Imperial College London’s React-2 study published in June suggested more than two million people in England may have had long COVID, with about a third of people who had coronavirus reporting symptoms lasting at least 12 weeks. The most common persistent symptoms flagged in that study included tiredness, shortness of breath, muscle aches and difficulty sleeping.

Read: Study finds link between COVID and increased risk of Alzheimer’s

These are some of the symptoms of long COVID identified in the study from UCL:

Cardiovascular
Blood clots, fainting, high or low blood pressure, bulging or inflamed veins, fast heart rate.

Skin
Itchiness, brittle or discoloured nails, rashes, peeling skin.

Gastrointestinal
Constipation, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, feeling full quickly, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting.

Head and throat
Facial paralysis/numbness, bloodshot eyes, ear and eye pain, hearing loss, conjunctivitis, runny nose, sore throat, vision loss.

Immune system
New allergies, shingles, changes in sensitivity to medication.

Musculoskeletal
Joint and muscle pain and aches experienced by 69.1 per cent of respondents.

Lungs
Breathing difficulty, shortness of breath, coughs.

Reproductive
Abnormally heavy or irregular periods, decrease in size of penis/testicles, early menopause, post-menopausal bleeding.

Mood and emotion
Aggression, anger, anxiety, apathy, delusions, depression, euphoria, irritability, sense of doom, tearfulness.

Cognitive dysfunction
Confusion/disorientation, difficulty problem solving, poor attention, difficulty thinking.

Hallucinations
Visual, auditory, tactile and other hallucinations.

Systemic
Fatigue, which was suffered by 98.3 per cent of people with long COVID, chills, sweats, fever, post-exertional malaise, high or low blood sugar.

Headaches
Headaches were suffered by 76.7 per cent of those surveyed, and ranged from migraines to pain in the temples, base of the skull, behind the eyes or all over the head.

Read: Which headaches you need to worry about

Memory issues
Memory problems including forgetting how to do routine tasks, and short and long-term memory problems. Short-term memory loss was experienced by 64.8 per cent of respondents.

Sensorimotor
Inability to cry or yawn, dizziness, neuralgia, numbness, seizures, tinnitus, sensation of brain pressure or warmth, sensitivity to noise, tingling/prickling/pins and needles, tremors.

Sleep
Insomnia, sleep apnoea, vivid dreams, nightmares, restless leg syndrome, waking early or during the night, waking unable to breathe. Overall, 78.6 per cent of long COVID sufferers had a sleep problem.

Language and speech
Difficulty understanding others, difficulty reading and writing, slurring words, speaking unrecognisable words.

Smell and taste
Loss of or heightened smell and taste.

Have you ever tested positive for COVID? Did you experience any of these symptoms? Why not share your thoughts in the comments section below?

– With PA

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