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Four Months After COVID-19 Diagnosis, Dallas Woman Tests Positive Again

A Dallas woman tested positive for COVID-19 in February, recovered, then tested positive again in June

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A Dallas woman is detailing her battle with not one but two rounds of coronavirus.

Over the weekend, Meredith McKee posted a tearful photo -- that's now been seen by more than 100,000 people -- from her hospital bed at Texas Health Presbyterian in Dallas.

McKee is sick with the coronavirus again, and she told NBC 5 she wouldn't wish it on her worst enemy.

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"To be alone in the hospital and not have anyone, you know," McKee said tearfully.

McKee tested positive for COVID-19 in February. She was diagnosed after feeling "clear and obvious" symptoms.

"I had a dry cough like you would not believe. It would not stop,” McKee said.

She fought the virus from home and beat it. She even donated plasma twice after testing positive for antibodies, thinking she was in the clear.

"I felt great doing finally something good coming out of the hell that I’ve been through because I'm going to help up to eight people with this plasma,” McKee said.

But this past Friday, McKee went to the hospital with high blood pressure and a headache.

She never imagined -- four months later -- she'd test positive for COVID-19 again.

"I was floored when it was positive," McKee said of her diagnosis.

An epidemiologist at UT Southwestern -- not connected to McKee's case -- said catching the coronavirus twice is possible, but it appears to be uncommon.

"We don't really know how serious the illness is the second time compared to the first time," said Dr. Robert Haley with UT Southwestern.

Other experts say positive results following negative tests may also be a quirk related to the type of test that was used, NBC News reported.

A second positive test after a negative result may mean the virus is simply taking its time leaving the body, doctors said, and is no longer able to infect others.

"It's possible that people could shed remnants of the virus for some period of time. That doesn't mean anything is wrong with them or that they are contagious," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville.

McKee said her doctors believe the virus went dormant after her first round of coronavirus, then reemerged.

She said the worst part is realizing she may have unknowingly exposed family, friends and countless strangers.

"I'm mortified and I'm seriously devastated," McKee said.

McKee said she wants her case to serve as a reminder for everyone to wear a mask, something she now wishes she'd done.

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