Anonymous wrote:this is probably old news, but in case it helps anyone getting ready to do this now and schedule it for the best time, i had my pfizer booster last night and have a very sore arm (at time of injection, all night, and this morning). if i had small children, i would be unable to pick them up, or do any type of physical work with this arm.
i am only surprised because i felt absolutely nothing with the first 2 pfizer shots this past spring.
apparently this is a good sign:
https://www.uthscsa.edu/patient-care/physicians/news-item/sore-arm-after-covid-vaccine-good-sign
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is probably old news, but in case it helps anyone getting ready to do this now and schedule it for the best time, i had my pfizer booster last night and have a very sore arm (at time of injection, all night, and this morning). if i had small children, i would be unable to pick them up, or do any type of physical work with this arm.
i am only surprised because i felt absolutely nothing with the first 2 pfizer shots this past spring.
apparently this is a good sign:
https://www.uthscsa.edu/patient-care/physicians/news-item/sore-arm-after-covid-vaccine-good-sign
I think that's a little overdramatic. Have you had a tdap lately? That's about the worst sore arm around, in my experience. But, it's not like it's an actual injury. You can just power through the pain, the arm is still perfectly functional.
NP. Everyone is (gasp) different. I had to go to India pre-covid, and at one point got three shots at once - tdap and two others (I think it was typhoid and hepatitis). My arm was sore, but not nearly as sore as from my one shot of J&J. The J&J was not only more painful, but the pain lasted a good 6-7 days. (When I got a Pfizer booster shot, it was sore for less than 24 hours).
Anonymous wrote:My arm was sore after Pfizer booster, but about the same as I always get with a flu shot and not nearly as bad as a Tdap which always makes it hard for my to lift things.
FYI, if this concerns you, moving your arm and exercising for awhile right after the shot can help reduce how sore your arm may get.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is probably old news, but in case it helps anyone getting ready to do this now and schedule it for the best time, i had my pfizer booster last night and have a very sore arm (at time of injection, all night, and this morning). if i had small children, i would be unable to pick them up, or do any type of physical work with this arm.
i am only surprised because i felt absolutely nothing with the first 2 pfizer shots this past spring.
apparently this is a good sign:
https://www.uthscsa.edu/patient-care/physicians/news-item/sore-arm-after-covid-vaccine-good-sign
I think that's a little overdramatic. Have you had a tdap lately? That's about the worst sore arm around, in my experience. But, it's not like it's an actual injury. You can just power through the pain, the arm is still perfectly functional.
Anonymous wrote:My experience with Moderna:
Dose 1 - weird but not terrible headache the day after, "covid arm" rash for about a week
Dose 2 - about 8 hours of bad headache & brain fog the day after
Booster shot - 102 fever, chills, nausea, muscle fatigue the day after. Could not get out of bed for about 12 hours.
The booster shot was 10x worse than dose 2.
Anonymous wrote:
I think that's a little overdramatic. Have you had a tdap lately? That's about the worst sore arm around, in my experience. But, it's not like it's an actual injury. You can just power through the pain, the arm is still perfectly functional.
NP here. It might seem dramatic but after my Moderna shots it felt like someone had wailed on my shoulder with a baseball bat. It was well beyond tdap soreness. I've never felt anything like that from a shot before. So...results may vary.