
"I was really exhausted and I was running a fever. I could tell I was real hot. I got in the house, and I just collapsed, she said. I had a lot of vomiting and nausea and muscle weakness and like cramping really bad. Benewiat added that what she didn't know at the time was that her lungs were filling with fluid."
"I understand why they're scared, completely, and I mean this virus is so rare that it doesn't really spread the same way Covid did, so I don't think that people really need to be as worried about it as they would have been with Covid. It is severe. It is serious, she continued. But I just don't think that it's as concerning as Covid would have been."
"I do have some brain fog and I do have some muscle weakness and tingling in my extremities, but for the most part, I am OK. I relearned everything. My motor functions are all back, so I'm pretty much okay."
"We shouldn't worry, right? We should not worry about this, Siegel replied. It has not changed. Mainly in rodents. The World Health Organization (WHO) made similar assurances last week after passengers on a hantavirus outbreak cruise ship returned home to several countries around the world, including the United States. This is not coronavirus. This is a very different virus."
A hantavirus survivor described becoming seriously ill in 2010 with exhaustion, fever, vomiting, nausea, muscle weakness, and severe cramping. She later learned her lungs were filling with fluid. She said the virus is rare and does not spread the same way Covid-19 did, so people should not be as worried. She reported long-term effects including brain fog, muscle weakness, and tingling, but said she relearned skills and regained motor functions. A physician stated there is no change in how the virus spreads and that it is mainly associated with rodents. The World Health Organization also emphasized that hantavirus is different from coronavirus and is known.
Read at www.mediaite.com
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