This girl received AstraZeneca, which is not an mRNA vaccine.
This girl received AstraZeneca, which is not an mRNA vaccine.
True, but whatever the technology (a vector vaccine that delivers the DNA code for the spike directly into the nucleus OR a messenger RNA that delivers the RNA code for the spike to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm), the goal is the same. Both the mRNA and the vector vaccines induce the cells to produce the spikes. From then on, the process is the same. The immune response is a lot louder in the case of the vector vaccines.
Since Camilla Canepa, another couple of women have died. The 1st was a teacher from Sicily by the name of Augusta Turiaco. Her daughter, a neurologist, said nothing on that occasion. Then, Camilla Canepa and another teacher (37yo) died. More recently, an agriculture entrepreneur by the name of Anna Biafora (age 49) died of an intestinal infarction. Now the neurologist daughter of the Augusta Turiaco is permitting herself many opinions on the policies of the gov’t..
This girl received AstraZeneca, which is not an mRNA vaccine.
******************************************************************************
It also is not a traditional vaccine. It uses bio-technology.
“It also uses a novel approach to inoculation, one that’s different from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna — and from conventional vaccines.
Vaccine makers have typically used the virus itself or a fragment of the virus, often in a weakened or inactivated form, to inoculate recipients.
But this new generation of vaccines uses genetic instructions for making parts of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes Covid-19.
All three candidates — Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca-Oxford — deliver the instructions for making the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, or the part of the virus that lets it enter human cells.
And it’s these instructions, which human cells then use to manufacture parts of the virus, that are injected into vaccine recipients, essentially coaching the immune system to fight off the invader should it arrive.
The Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines both use mRNA as their platform for delivering the genetic instructions.
AstraZeneca-Oxford’s uses DNA instead, and the DNA is delivered to cells with the help of another virus known as an adenovirus. (Other Covid-19 vaccine developers, like CanSino Biologics and Johnson & Johnson, are also using adenovirus vectors.)”