Early on she experienced tachycardic, at 140 beats per minute (bpm), and breathless, with a respiratory rate of 20–24 at rest.
“My heart rate would increase further, to 170 bpm, on standing and with minimal exertion, such as getting a drink or using the bathroom.”
“I began having cyclic attacks of pins and needles in all four limbs and violent entire-body shaking. The shaking was as violent as seizure, but it wasn’t one because I was conscious.”
“The attacks were associated with an unquenchable thirst, with or without an urgent need to open to my bowels, vomiting, or increased shortness of breath. They came in daily cycles lasting up to 14 hours at a time. I would frequently shake through the entire night.”
Her right cerebral hemispheres felt numb and she experienced a “hit poker” sensation deep in her ear.
Auditory hallucinations.
Disturbed sleep.
Night terrors.
Deep brain noise.
Vertigo.
I’d be pretty damn depressed if that was happening to me too.
It took a long time for a diagnosis of limbic encephalitis.
This is a doctor.
How many other Covid associated brain injuries have gone undiagnosed?
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Now what could it be about the delightful Reginald D Hunter talking to her (overpaid on taxpayer money) daughter that would result in Dorries using a hash #wheresmyshotgunman
Quite apart from the comments to which @MrJohnNicolson refers being libellous they breach the codes of conduct for MPs and pulls the House and politics into disrepute.
But does put her up there with Johnson’s intemperate comments.
He is director of a company called Sumner Group Holdings, which has interests in a wide range of businesses, including Peruvian and Brazilian gold mines. His stake in the company is said to be worth about £5 million.
“One of its subsidiaries, a nursing recruitment agency called SG Recruitment UK, was awarded two PPE contracts of £23.9 million and £26.1 million last year, despite auditors having expressed concerns about the firm’s solvency.”
It is feared that incorrect Covid test results have been sent out to the public from the lab, run by the diagnostics firm Immensa, with staff allegedly forced to operate faulty machines without proper protective equipment, risking cross-contamination & spoiled samples
One whistleblower said the tips were incompatible with the machine and kept falling into the wells where the Covid sample solution was held. “I had to put my hand into the machine to retrieve the tips. This was the only option but it increased the risk of contamination,” 😱
New recruits at the lab, located in Loughborough, were never given formal training and Covid sample waste was not disposed of correctly, whistleblowers have told The Independent.
🇨🇳
1 yr follow up of mild Covid cases
📌The mean age of the study population was 51.6 ± 10.8 years.
📌120 patients, 104 (86.7%) were cases of non-severe COVID-19.
📌Pulmonary diffusion impairment was reported in 30 (26.1%) out of 115 patients, and 24 (24.2%) out of the 99 non-severe cases.
The values of forced vital capacity (FVC), forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), FVC/FEV1, vital capacity (VC), total lung capacity (TLC), and residual volume (RV) were less than the normal range in 1.7, 8.6, 0.9, 11.2, 7.0, and 0.9% of the patients, respectively.