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They tested negative for COVID-19 Still, they have long COVID symptoms
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They tested negative for COVID-19 Still, they have long COVID symptoms
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She tested negative for COVID-19 so why did her debilitating symptoms linger for months?
Updated 10:29 AM;
Kristin Novotny once led an active life, with regular CrossFit workouts and football in the front yard with her children plus a job managing the kitchen at a middle school. Now, the 33-year-old mother of two from De Pere, Wisconsin, has to rest after any activity, even showering. Conversations leave her short of breath.
Long after their initial coronavirus infections, patients with a malady known as “long COVID-19” continue to struggle with varied symptoms such as fatigue, shortness of breath, gastrointestinal problems, muscle and joint pain, and neurological issues. Novotny has been contending with these and more, despite testing negative for COVID-19-19 seven months ago.
They tested negative for Covid Still, they have long Covid symptoms
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Parasites are going extinct. Here s why we need to save them.
They’re “gross and slimy and flaccid and wiggling.” But parasites can be just as important as more charismatic animals and many may be on the verge of disappearing.
Larvae of the horsehair worm infiltrate crickets and grow inside them. The worms need water to mate, so they drive the insects to jump into streams, where they become an important food source for fish.Photograph by Anand Varma, Nat Geo Image Collection
ByErika Engelhaupt
Email
Growing up, Chelsea Wood dreamed of becoming a marine biologist and studying sharks or dolphins the kinds of big, exciting animals that biologists call charismatic megafauna. Instead, during a college internship, she found herself peering through a microscope at the guts of a snail.