With Ellen DeGeneres’ chat show ending after 19 seasons, many fans have reflected on the highs and lows of her career. In a more recent instance, the 64-year-old described her “excruciating” back discomfort after getting COVID-19 during the pandemic’s peak.

Amid allegations that her show was a hostile workplace, DeGeneres decided to walk away from the spotlight, instead hoping to spend more time fulfilling her passion for animal conservation, having recently finished The Ellen DeGeneres Campus of the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund in Rwanda.

However, it wasn’t long ago that the actress was diagnosed with Covid and shared an update on social media, where she also expressed her astonishment at having back discomfort as a symptom.

After verifying that she caught the virus in December 2020, the host stated that she was following “appropriate protocols” at the time.

Around a week later, DeGeneres issued a health update in which she stated that she was feeling “100 percent” before going on to explain something about the illness that medical professionals “don’t tell you.”

“Jimmy Kimmel Live!” airs every weeknight at 11:35 p.m. EST and offers a broad array of celebrities, athletes, musical performers, comedians, human interest issues, comic bits, and a house band.

Ellen DeGeneres (“Ellen”), Billie Joe Armstrong (“Billie Joe Armstrong: Welcome to My Panic”), and musical guests Jimmie Allen & Brad Paisley were among the guests on Tuesday, April 20.

“I feel extremely good,” she said. “One thing they don’t tell you is that you will experience extreme back ache. I had no idea that was a symptom until I talked to several other folks.”

“Who would have guessed?” “How so?” DeGeneres thought. “I have back discomfort.”

Having contracted Covid in the year it initially appeared, there had been less investigation into symptoms compared to more recent years.

Back pain was not officially listed as a Covid symptom by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) at the start of the pandemic. Interestingly, “muscle or body aches” was one of them.

Fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath, exhaustion, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, and diarrhoea were other early warning indications of Covid.

The NHS, on the other hand, explains why so many individuals suffer from back pain and other joint and muscle disorders.

“Many patients will have had some aches and pains before becoming ill with Covid,” according to the NHS website. “Being ill may have caused these issues to resurface or worsen.” This is because frequent movement benefits our joints and muscles.

“When people are sick with COVID, they are less active than usual. Aches and pains, stiffness, and muscle weakening may result.”

When your muscles are weak, you may have difficulty standing, climbing stairs, holding objects with your hands, or lifting your arms above your head. Back ache and shoulder pain were often reported symptoms as Covid spread over the world.

Another factor that contributed to the development of back pain during this time period was the increase in working from home. Even when people were not required to work at home, limits on socializing and going outside meant that people were less mobile overall and spent more time sitting down.

A 388-person research in Malta discovered that 30% of persons had chronic back pain prior to Covid, compared to 49% who had back pain since Covid’s emergence, with the majority of the latter reporting that they had never had back pain before the epidemic.

It’s crucial to realize that just because you experience back discomfort doesn’t indicate you have Covid. Backache can be caused by a variety of circumstances, and if it occurs in conjunction with nasal congestion, sneezing, coughing, or fever, muscle pain can be indicative of other illnesses such as flu, which may be more prevalent during the winter months in the UK.

Similarly, persons suffering from pneumonia may experience backache as a result of thoracic inflammation and infection. Back pain might also cause the following symptoms:

Sensation of shooting, burning, or stabbing

Radiating pain down your leg

Needles and pins

Lack of capacity to relax

A persistent dull aching.

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