COVID isn’t just infecting you—it could be reactivating viruses that have been dormant in your body for years

You had COVID a few months ago and recovered—but things still aren’t quite right.

When you stand up, you feel dizzy, and your heart races. Even routine tasks leave you feeling spent. And what was once a good night’s sleep no longer feels refreshing.

Long COVID, right? It may not be so simple.

A mild or even an asymptomatic case of COVID can cause reservoirs of some viruses you’ve previously battled to reactivate, potentially leading to symptoms of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome—a condition that resembles long COVID, according to a recent study published in the journal Frontiers in Immunology.

Researchers found herpes viruses like Epstein-Barr, one of the drivers behind mono, circulating in unvaccinated patients who had experienced COVID. In patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, antibody responses were stronger, signaling an immune system struggling to fight off the lingering viruses.

Such non-COVID pathogens have been named as likely culprits behind Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis. The nebulous condition with no definitive cause leads to symptoms like fatigue, brain fog, dizziness when moving, and unrefreshing sleep.

The symptoms of many long COVID patients could be described as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, experts say. Researchers in the October study hypothesized that COVID sometimes leads to suppression of the immune system, allowing latent viruses reactivated by the stress of COVID to recirculate—viruses linked to symptoms that are common in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and long COVID.

Thus, “long COVID” in some may not be an entirely new entity, but another post-viral illness—like ones seen in some patients after Ebola, the original SARS of 2003-2004, and other infections—that overlaps with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

As top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said in 2020, long COVID may “very well might be a post-viral syndrome associated with COVID-19.”

‘We’re still not doing that’

It's possible that COVID is reactivating latent viruses in at least a portion of long COVID patients, causing Chronic Fatigue Syndrome symptoms, Dr. Alba Miranda Azola, co-director of the long COVID clinic at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, told Fortune.

But her clinic doesn’t check for the reactivation of viruses in long COVID patients. She doesn’t think the possibility of such viruses causing symptoms in patients is worth giving those patients antivirals or antibiotics, which can lead to undesirable side effects.

“We don’t have enough evidence to support that treatment,” she said.