babs23r
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2012
- Messages
- 739
I was chatting with my sister this evening. She gets her 2nd shot on Friday. She has worked through the pandemic as a Community EMT. It's a special community healthcare role, but this year it has taken her through the worst of the outbreaks. She has been in and out of nursing homes and had other exposures. She said she has had multiple exposures to COVID a week. Her co-workers been sick, but to her surprise, she has not been sick yet.
She only told me now because she knows I would have been extra anxious about her, but told me this because she wonders if maybe there is an innate resistance to the bug. Things that make one go "hmmmm".
They are rolling out Phase 1B in my state and my parents are both in the age group 75+ and qualify for the vaccine. My dad is scheduled for his first dose this week Wednesday and my mom and her husband on Thursday. Has anyone heard anything about how the “elderly” are doing post vaccination? It’s been encouraging to read how little those that have received the vaccine here have reacted, but I’m assuming you are all younger and healthy. I’m a bit nervous for my parents!
My Mom (97) had her first dose of the Pfizer vaccine this past week- just some mild arm soreness. I am more concerned about the second dose. My stepson and his wife (both in their 40s) both had little reaction to the first dose, but had strong flu like symptoms after the second. However the fever, chills, ashiness, etc only lasted a day.
Well, one of our doc friends who was never sick (and did my anesthesia for 2 of my surgeries since February) is positive for antibodies. So he must have had it or carried the virus or whatever, but he never felt bad or missed a day of work.
It would be interesting to see if she has antibodies.
A woman I know had her college kids tested for antibodies because they went back to school (where one of mine goes— they stayed hybrid including in person classes) and her husband is at risk. Both boys have antibodies but she does not.
(As an aside, my friend who had a mild case of covid in July— who exposed me— still is positive for antibodies, thought they have told her to still get the vaccine since she is a hospice doctor)
There are some theories that Asian, Indian and African countries were exposed to SARS1 and therefore have cross immunity to SARS2. They have actually tested this and found the hypothesis confirmed in the lab. There is also the idea that some people have resistance to serious symptoms (vitamin D, ACE2, glucose, melatonin levels, etc.). And, some people developed T-cell immunity to the disease and do not get it again with symptoms. It’s amazing that some people don’t exhibit symptoms but are found to have antibodies. I’m happy your sister has access to the vaccine.
I got the email from my union that I've been "matched" with a provider and they'll be emailing me in 24hrs to make my appointment! I've never been so excited to get a needle in my arm! For any of our medically trained folks on here who might know, since I'm breastfeeding when would the baby get antibodies from me? I want to make sure to feed as much as possible during this window.
Antibodies can definitely be passed through breastmilk, and offer some protection (not like receiving an actual vaccine, but certainly helps!) for baby. The first shot will start building protection over days to weeks, and the second shot will complete the process. So I'd say within a couple of weeks. How old is your bubba?
He'll be one month the day I get the vaccine, thank you for the info!
I read that you shouldn’t take pain relievers after the vaccine..It may interfere with the immune response. Any medical people know if this is true?
A nurse in one of my FB doggie groups has had both shots of the Pfizer jab. The second dose caused her quite severe reaction, large hot lump at the injection site, high temperature, blinding headaches, nausea and fatigue. Her symptoms lasted 90 hours in total, then she was OK. It sounds like her reaction was unusually severe, she took Aleve, but was told she shouldn’t have, to let the symptoms run their course.
So I am reading mixed reviews about this. Some pharmacists are recommending you can take ibuprofen or Tylenol after the vaccination but I think it's better to skip the NSAIDs at least. To allow the body to produce antibodies against the illness. You don't want to dampen your body's immune response.
Speak with your doctor though as I am reading different info depending on the source. I would err on the side of conservatism though and not take NSAIDs after the vaccine if I could avoid it.
What is NSAID please Missy
(Hopefully ill still remember by June when we finally all get done here )
Non steroidal anti inflammatories like:
ibuprofen.
naproxen.
diclofenac.
celecoxib.
mefenamic acid.
etoricoxib.
indomethacin.
high-dose aspirin (low-dose aspirin is not normally considered to be an NSAID).
Tylenol (Acetaminophen) is not an NSAID.
OMG Tylenol is just paracetamol![]()