- A 25-year-old coronavirus survivor was able to exit a rehab hospital after being pronounced brain dead weeks after an infection that summer.
- The woman had strokes and had to be resuscitated after a heart attack. These are COVID-19 symptoms that have been seen in many patients, including young adults.
- The woman stopped breathing for 30 minutes in June, and the doctors advised the patient’s family that it would be a vegetable.
Doctors were baffled in the first few months of the novel coronavirus pandemic when they saw a steady increase in neurological and cardiac problems as a result of COVID-19. Studies showed that COVID-19 patients, including younger people, were likely to have strokes and heart attacks.
The researchers soon realized that because of its effects on the blood, the culprit was actually the virus. Clotting is a serious COVID-19 complication that is treated with blood thinners in hospitalized patients. These drugs can prevent clots from forming, which would otherwise damage all types of organs, including the brain and heart. Coagulation can occur in the tiny vessels that serve the lungs, making the exchange of vital gases at this level impossible. More recently, doctors have speculated that clotting can lead to ringing in the ears and even hearing loss. And these symptoms also occur in younger patients.
There is no guarantee that young adults will survive the coronavirus without problems. Some have severe complications, others develop Long COVID, and others die. But then there are amazing stories that show why hope should never be lost after a positive coronavirus diagnosis, as in the case of a 25 year old who was pronounced brain dead during her COVID-19 experience. Not only did she recover, but she made it through rehab and left the hospital on her own.
Tionna Hairston and her mother, Stacey Peatross, were both diagnosed in May WPRI.
“She took care of me when I was sick. She hardly had any symptoms, ”said her mother. But Hairstone’s health then deteriorated when the young woman experienced the severe COVID-19 complications mentioned above.
“Strokes. She had a heart attack and had to be resuscitated from it. She had to have an implanted defibrillator, ”said Novant Health Rehabilitation Hospital’s medical director, Dr. James Mclean.
Sometime in June, Hairston stopped breathing for 30 minutes and she was pronounced brain dead. “They thought we should take her off the life support because she had no hope of life,” said Peatross. “You thought she was a vegetable. She would have no quality of life at all. ”
But the 25-year-old miraculously got better. She was in rehab for over a month and relearned how to eat, dress, and stand alone. She was released from Novant Rehab Hospital on Monday and will continue her rehabilitation at home.
“To see her get up from that chair and take steps when no one thinks she can ever walk again … She said, ‘Mom, I’ll go,'” her mother said.
This is not the first time a COVID-19 patient has to relearn how to perform certain tasks after serious complications. A young woman in Spain who believed she was not affected by the virus spent 69 days in intensive care. Then she was taken to a rehab facility because she had to relearn how to walk.
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