Why does everyone react differently to Covid-19 vaccines? Here’s what experts say

May 5, 2021 0 By Rajesh

I am a healthy person in my 30s, and when it was finally my turn to get the Covid-19 vaccine, I thought I would do well. Although it is especially true, things did not go as transparent as I thought they would.

I had a pretty serious pain in my arm after receiving my first dose of the moderna vaccine, but I just did not sleep at night at night and I understood that it was the worst. Honestly, I felt a little sufficient on everything.

Things were different after the second shot. I had it at a local pharmacy, and the pharmacist warned me that women of my age tend to have more extreme side effects than others. I smiled, supposed he just issued a standard warning and returned home. I went to bed this night delighted that I was about to be fully vaccinated, but that I could feel a little defended the next day and I definitely did it.

I woke up some time around 3 years old. I felt nauseous and I just could not make me sleep, which is rare for me. I asked myself for about an hour before deciding to go to the bathroom. As I turned to bed, I felt like something was not quite right. The next thing I knew, I heard the sound of my head striking the floor. I had gone out.

Related: 14 side effects of Covid vaccine: here’s what you could experience after your shot

I called my husband Chris from the floor and he came to rush me. He called the doctor, who told me to drink a lot of fluids and go to the urgency if things get worse. I stayed on the floor – it felt more … comfortable, I guess-but I felt too weak to take my head to drink the water that Chris had put on the floor next to me. I finally finally at the bathroom to vomit, before Chris helped me to bed again. After that, I called the job and I spent most of the day sleeping. But that evening, I felt a lot, much better.

I was hesitant to share my story at the beginning, with so many weighing on their post-vaccinated symptoms, I did not want to add to anxiety. But I came to the idea precisely because there are so many things there at that time on the side effects of the vaccine – and many times we did not give the complete story. Of course, my vaccine reaction was a little more dramatic than the one I would have preferred, but there is an explanation of most of it.

See, as far as I hate to admit it, I am a pleasure – when I am sick, the chances are rather good that I will hit the ground. Some examples: I went when I developed the exhaustion of heat during the practice of the cross in college, I fainted when I was pregnant with twins, I’m blackened several times after losing a lot of Blood when I had a miscarriage and I collapsed on my bathroom floor just before being diagnosed with severe appendicitis in October. Whenever I completely panicked my poor husband – and myself.

According to my doctor, the exit is probably only the answer of my body when I’m sick. She explained that my vague vague nerve, the longest and most complex body nerve, can simply become too stimulated when I’m sick. “Then your body just wants to be on the floor,” she says. And that’s.

My point is the following: Everyone’s experience with Covid-19 vaccine is different, and there is often more to the story of someone you could achieve. Nevertheless, it is understandable to have questions – I know I did. Here’s what you need to know.

What are the most common reactions to COVID-19 vaccines?

Disease and Prevention Control Centers (CDC) enumerates them as the most common side effects for one of the CVIV-19 vaccines:

Pain in the arm where you have shot

Redness in the arm where you have shot

Swelling in the arm where you have shot

Tired

Headache

Muscle pain

Chills

Fever

Nausea

The CDC also warns side effects after your second shot, if you receive the Pfizer or Modern vaccine, may be more intense than those you have had after your first shot.