Since March, Alyssa Milano found herself battling COVID-19. Though she beat the virus, it has lingering after-effects. For her, that includes hair loss. Symptoms began months ago in the form of fever and intense headaches.
During the brunt of her battle with the coronavirus, Milano thought for sure she was dying. Indeed, when she got tested, she tested positive for the deadly virus’s antibodies. Her condition felt so dire, she needed a breathing apparatus. But even all the way in August, new effects crop up.
“This was me on April 2nd after being sick for 2 weeks,” Milano wrote in an Instagram post from last week. She went on and outlined everything she felt, which was all unprecedented for her. “I had never been this kind of sick. Everything hurt. Loss of smell. It felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest. I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t keep food in me. I lost 9 pounds in 2 weeks. I was confused. Low grade fever. And the headaches were horrible.”
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The accompanying picture shows her with a breathing apparatus to make up for that elephant compressing her chest. When she went to get tested, though, some things became inconsistent. Initial testing showed she did not have COVID-19. But as symptoms persisted for months, she got another antibody test, which finally turned up positive.
Debilitating and bewildering systems continued for months since she contracted COVID-19. Now, those effects for Alyssa Milano include hair loss. She shared the update on Twitter along with a video showing her combing her hair. When she pulls the brush back, many long strands hang from the bristles. Next, she captioned her tweet, “Thought I’d show you what #Covid19 does to your hair. Please take this seriously.”
Replies had mixed reactions of sympathy, doubt, and side notes for possible causes. Haircare experts say amounts like this are normal. Other comments voiced gratitude for the transparency. Others still point to COVID-19 as an indirect but still responsible culprit. They note that intense stress-related hormone level changes caused by the intense conditions from the coronavirus could cause hair loss. It’s not something in the virus’s own DNA and mechanisms, but rather the host’s body caused by the toll the virus takes on that body. Indeed, other survivors besides Alyssa Milano do cite hair loss as an after-effect from the virus.
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