I got diagnosed with covid, what should i take to boost my immune system? | |
bluefin
User ID: 66795056 United States 01/22/2021 11:10 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | My symptom was, I took one bite of something I ate all the time and that one bite of food made me dry heave over the trash can. It tasted like old metal of some kind. I took the THC/CBD and some THC vape and it knocked me out. I slept good and woke up hungry. I did have a fever, that I slept it off. After three days of fatigue, I felt better. Good Luck my fellow PATRIOTS !!! bluefin |
Anonymous not-doctor Coward User ID: 79248700 United States 01/22/2021 11:15 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Very mild symptoms so far. Quoting: GlassMan509 Started day one (wed) with chills, no fever. Quickly progressed that night to a little bit of a cough, scratchy throat, headache, hot/cold flashes. I didn't (and still don't) have a fever. Yesterday the same symptoms continued and I started to get a pain in my ribs. The pain feels like pleurisy, which ive had before. Today I hardly had any chills, no headache, hardly a cough, throat feels almost 100%, but the pain in my ribs is a lil worse. I have read that mild cases can sometimes turn severe when the immune system overreacts. I want to obviously avoid this if possible. What should I take/do to improve my immune system? The covid itself isn’t your only worry; the secondary infections need to be treated too. Take precautions against pneumonia setting up. This is why antibiotics is often suggested as part of a treatment plan. Some old types of antibiotics are also antiviral. For instance Azithromycin and ciprofloxacin have a chloroquine-like effect; but there are undesirable side effects, so read up / consult doc before taking. I second that most of what was said before was sound advice. Personally I found myself intolerant to high dosages of Zinc and had to take less. Inhaler was helpful. Also helpful to periodically check with pulse-ox, sometimes it was lower than one would have guessed. Keeping cans of oxygen nearby helps manage when hard to catch breath. Those cans look and feel “empty”, so make sure others know that or they will throw them away. Not sure where you live, but if it’s rural, and the weather is nice, get some fresh air and sunlight and do a very mild/gentle outdoor activity, maybe some easy gardening tasks. Sitting around for weeks/months could exacerbate the tendency of developing clots. Have a plan, consult a doc if you can, and decide for yourself now what the cutoff point is for when you will go into a hospital. You don’t want to be the tough guy that dies from lack of treatment. With that said, there are numerous that have rode out the disease like any other cold. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 79246784 United States 01/22/2021 11:17 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Pilgrim001
User ID: 78018011 United States 01/22/2021 11:38 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |