Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
03-31-2021, 08:02 AM
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/a-virginia-man-who-got-johnson-johnson-s-covid-19-vaccine-developed-a-severe-rash-that-spread-over-his-entire-body/ar-BB1f9wG5?ocid=msedgdhp
Business Insider
A Virginia man who got Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine developed a severe rash that spread over his entire body
acollman@businessinsider.com (Ashley Collman) 2 hrs ago
Richard Terrell's skin turned red and swelled up after he got J&J's COVID-19 vaccine.
His doctors say they believe it was directly caused by the vaccine.
But they said the reaction was "extremely rare" and encouraged people to still get the vaccine.
See more stories on Insider's business page.
A 74-year-old Virginia man developed a severe rash that spread across his entire body after getting the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine on March 6, WRIC's Talya Cunningham reported.
Richard Terrell of Goochland, Virginia, told the news station that he started experiencing the symptoms about four days after the getting the single-shot vaccine.
"I began to feel a little discomfort in my armpit and then a few days later I began to get an itchy rash, and then after that I began to swell and my skin turned red," Terrell told WRIC.
The rash proceeded to spread over his entire body, causing his legs and arms to swell and his skin to peel off, he said.
Insider has contacted Johnson & Johnson for comment.
"It was stinging, burning, and itching," Terrell told WRIC. "Whenever I bent my arms or legs, like the inside of my knee, it was very painful where the skin was swollen and was rubbing against itself."
According to WRIC, the rash first prompted Terrell to visit a dermatologist, who told Terrell to immediately go to the emergency room.
Terrell went on to spend five days at VCU Medical Center, where the rash was treated and doctors biopsied the rash to see what caused it, WRIC reported.
His doctors say the vaccine is still safe
One of Terrell's dermatology doctors at the hospital, Dr. Fnu Nutan, told WRIC that they determined the vaccine had caused an "extremely rare" reaction. Nutan said the doctors had ruled out the possibility of other viral infections, COVID-19 itself, and kidney and liver issues.
Nutan said she believed there's something about Terrell's genetic makeup that made him react this way to the vaccine, according to WRIC.
Nutan told WRIC that Terrell's experience shouldn't stop others from getting the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which the US Food and Drug Administration has said is safe and effective.
There haven't been similar reports of severe reactions to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which was authorized for use in the US at the end of February.
It has in fact been reported that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine may be the superior vaccine of those given the OK in the US so far, since it requires only one shot, is proved to work against some of the new variants, and appears to have milder side effects compared with the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
This and my daughter told me about a doctor in the building where her dental practice is, has died just 4 days after getting his first vaccine shot.
His organs shut down and there was no way doctors could stop it.
He was a very healthy 34 year old man, that had just gotten married about 8 months before.
I will never get that shot...
I'd rather take my chances with my not ever getting COVID and if getting Covid- my surviving it.-Tyr
Business Insider
A Virginia man who got Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine developed a severe rash that spread over his entire body
acollman@businessinsider.com (Ashley Collman) 2 hrs ago
Richard Terrell's skin turned red and swelled up after he got J&J's COVID-19 vaccine.
His doctors say they believe it was directly caused by the vaccine.
But they said the reaction was "extremely rare" and encouraged people to still get the vaccine.
See more stories on Insider's business page.
A 74-year-old Virginia man developed a severe rash that spread across his entire body after getting the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine on March 6, WRIC's Talya Cunningham reported.
Richard Terrell of Goochland, Virginia, told the news station that he started experiencing the symptoms about four days after the getting the single-shot vaccine.
"I began to feel a little discomfort in my armpit and then a few days later I began to get an itchy rash, and then after that I began to swell and my skin turned red," Terrell told WRIC.
The rash proceeded to spread over his entire body, causing his legs and arms to swell and his skin to peel off, he said.
Insider has contacted Johnson & Johnson for comment.
"It was stinging, burning, and itching," Terrell told WRIC. "Whenever I bent my arms or legs, like the inside of my knee, it was very painful where the skin was swollen and was rubbing against itself."
According to WRIC, the rash first prompted Terrell to visit a dermatologist, who told Terrell to immediately go to the emergency room.
Terrell went on to spend five days at VCU Medical Center, where the rash was treated and doctors biopsied the rash to see what caused it, WRIC reported.
His doctors say the vaccine is still safe
One of Terrell's dermatology doctors at the hospital, Dr. Fnu Nutan, told WRIC that they determined the vaccine had caused an "extremely rare" reaction. Nutan said the doctors had ruled out the possibility of other viral infections, COVID-19 itself, and kidney and liver issues.
Nutan said she believed there's something about Terrell's genetic makeup that made him react this way to the vaccine, according to WRIC.
Nutan told WRIC that Terrell's experience shouldn't stop others from getting the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which the US Food and Drug Administration has said is safe and effective.
There haven't been similar reports of severe reactions to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which was authorized for use in the US at the end of February.
It has in fact been reported that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine may be the superior vaccine of those given the OK in the US so far, since it requires only one shot, is proved to work against some of the new variants, and appears to have milder side effects compared with the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
This and my daughter told me about a doctor in the building where her dental practice is, has died just 4 days after getting his first vaccine shot.
His organs shut down and there was no way doctors could stop it.
He was a very healthy 34 year old man, that had just gotten married about 8 months before.
I will never get that shot...
I'd rather take my chances with my not ever getting COVID and if getting Covid- my surviving it.-Tyr