https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/article/common-antidepressant-can-treat-long-covid-fatigue-symptoms-study/

"A common and low-cost antidepressant can successfully treat fatigue associated with long COVID, according to a new study.

Co-led by researchers from McMaster University in Ontario, the study found that the drug fluvoxamine, which is commonly sold under the name Luvox, significantly reduced fatigue symptoms in a clinical trial of 399 adults with long COVID. It is one of the first times a medication has been shown to effectively treat the condition. "

https://doi.org/10.7326/ANNALS-25-03959

Common antidepressant can treat long COVID fatigue symptoms: study

A common and low-cost antidepressant can successfully treat fatigue associated with long COVID, according to a new study.

CTVNews
@kevinbowrin woah I need to ask my doctor about this!

@douglasvb @kevinbowrin much more likely that you need to bring your doctor a printout of this paper.

I’ve been bringing much more research to my doctors as I struggle with long covid (5.5 years later) than they’ve been bringing to me.

@lkanies @douglasvb @kevinbowrin good idea. And they've made it open access!

Annals of Internal Medicine: The Effect of Fluvoxamine and Metformin for Fatigue in Patients With Long COVID: An Adaptive Randomized Trial, Vyas et al. 2026-03-31:
https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-03959

#LongCovid #ScienceResearch

@Centretowner @lkanies @douglasvb @kevinbowrin

It's worth a shot. Hell I'll try anything at this point.

But, I read the paper there and beyond the headline, shows only a small but meaningful difference from placebo based on subjective scoring of feeling fatigue. ( https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-03959 )

The discussion also mentions (to roughly paraphrase) that treating depression associated with feeling crappy may not actually be addressing the underlying pathology but may be helping people feel better anyway. Thats not a bad thing but it would be great to actually treat the underlying pathology.

It's likely the feeling of utter hopelessness adds to the feeling of fatigue so it may be a valid treatment point too. I guess.

@rockmastermike @Centretowner @lkanies @kevinbowrin the specialist I'm seeing at the Stanford long COVID clinic (it's the ME/CFS clinic that also does long COVID) hasn't been too interested in anything beyond Mediterranean diet and low dose Naltrexone for several years. My PCP is more willing to experiment with me although he usually defers to the specialist.

Maybe I need to find a new specialist...

@douglasvb @Centretowner @lkanies @kevinbowrin

I've experienced some improvement with daily Celecoxib (anti-inflamatory). fwiw.

there's also some evidence that vitamin B-complex helps suppress some autoimmune inflammation at the source. So I've started a daily fairly high dose (carefully).

Just to hedge my bets (even though it seems unlikely but cant hurt i guess) Also omega-3 from fish oil and turmeric

*sigh*

@rockmastermike @Centretowner @lkanies @kevinbowrin I tried various doses of various vitamin B options but it gives me wild dreams. Even one baby aspirin taken within four hours of bed gives me crazy dreams though. I actually stopped the LDN about four months ago because I needed a break so that I could catch up on sleep. It surprisingly didn't impact me too much to come off the LDN. The one thing that's made a surprising difference is Zepbound. I'm at 7.5mg once weekly.

@douglasvb wow! everyone's really different. I don't get the crazy dreams at all.

Might be worth looking into the peptide (Zep) there but i already have trouble with low apatite most days I've heard thats being actively studied as a treatment