Info from a PhD toxicologist on Ivermectin:
Definitive Ivermectin Toxicity Review
One of the safest drugs ever
by Chris Martenson
Wednesday, September 8, 2021, 6:39 PM
Tagscovid-19 ivermectin toxicity toxicology
Video Description
There’s been an absolutely brutal campaign against Ivermectin in the public press. I thought it was time to deploy my background as a Toxicologist to review the known toxicity of Ivermectin. Fortunately, a world-class review paper on Ivermectin came out in 2021 by Jacques Descotes, a prominent toxicologist working at the behest of Medincell.
That comprehensive review of Ivermectin reveals that it is among the safest and most well-tolerated drugs ever introduced to the market.
In this episode I walk through the expert review of Ivermectin by Jacques Descotes MD, PharmD, PhD which was conducted in early 2021. We discuss the safety, toxicity, and known side effects and drug interactions, few and mild as they are. The conclusion is that “Ivermectin human toxicity cannot be claimed to be a serious cause for concern.”
BTTT!!!
What is in Ivermectin? What makes it work? Where does it come from? All questions we should be asking.
Definitive Ivermectin Toxicity Review
One of the safest drugs ever
In defense of numberonepal, I also absolutely get where he’s coming from. I would not take Ivermectin if I didn’t have coof symptoms. I cringe when I read of people taking it every week, or month, or whatever, prophylactically. If my body could even handle that, which is a big “if”, I can’t help but wonder if so much use would reduce its effect by creating a tolerance level (or whatever it’s called). But then, I cringe at people taking Tylenol at the drop of a hat for the slightest ache or pain. I never even take that, and still have a small mostly-full bottle of aspirin that I bought about 17 years ago.
That being said, I doubt I would ever choose to go on something like the Niatonin regimen, unless I perceived a specific and well-justified need to do so. Yes, it’s a non-drug, natural supplementation, I might or might not be deficient in one or both components, and it may help with inflammation I’m unaware of. It may even make me more resistant to the Coof, who knows? But as long as I’m unaware of any concrete need for it, it strikes me as way too much fuss and bother. Interesting to read about, though.
That’s just how I roll. Others will roll differently. That’s just life. ;-)
Mark