Bell’s, Hunt’s, caused by shingles, regardless, a couple of months after his wife goes to the hospital with a clot, he finds his face is paralyzed.
Do you think they’ll make the connection?
Had a friend who got this 48 years ago in her twenties and it paralyzed half of her face for the rest of her life. Lovely gal and smart as a whip.
Do you think they’ll make the connection?
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
In a word? No.
Now there’s an uptick in CJD (Creuzfeld Jakob) aka ‘Mad Cow’ except this version isn’t caused by cows.
Steve Kirsch article (ignore the b*tching about Twitter):
https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/twitter-made-a-huge-mistake-i-was?s=r
Jessica Rose article (this is the really scary one):
RSFIEDLLFNKV... are we looking at weaponized amyloidosis?
And what of prions? An exploratory piece.
https://jessicar.substack.com/p/rsfiedllfnkv-are-we-looking-at-weaponized?s=r
From link - first paragraph & her closing thoughts:
“First I need to tell you guys that the number of Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD)/prion reports in VAERS since the deployment of the COVID-19 injections has far surpassed the background rate for the U.S. for the year.
My closing thoughts
The prion thing is not the same thing as the amyloid thing, but they may be more inter-linked that we think. I don’t know yet. Walnut brings up the concept of a ‘prioloid’ in his Substack. I don’t know what I think of this yet. The one thing I know is that prions aggregate due to their high beta sheet compostion and are histochemically and ultrastructurally identical to amyloid.[2]
It’s time to talk solutions. And you should read these too.10 11 12 13
If some of the peptides in the SARS-nCoV-2 spike protein are able to form amyloid plaques then we will need treatment for those affected. Even more horrifying, if the modified mRNA (that was codon-optimized) contains amyloidogenic peptides that are able to from amyloid plaques, then the people injected are in serious trouble and will need some sort of solution. Well, a lot are dying now - the serious trouble has unfortunately passed for them. By the way, Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS)? Really?
I looked up some fibrinolytic agents because I was asked by an MD the other day what to suggest to help a patient of his with recent diagnosis of amyloid plaques in the brain. I had no idea what to say. One person suggested in the comments section of Walnut’s Substack that Lumbrokinase nattokinase is something to look at. But it might involve eating dirt and earth worms.14
I will return my lovelies. If you want my advice, really learn how bad and irreversible amyloid plaque formation is (maybe just mention the word Alzheimer’s - Chris Masterjohn wrote a piece on Alzheimer’s a while ago but it is thorough and relevant) and convey to your loved ones being told they need to get injected again that the shots may cause them. Chris wrote that the accumulation of amyloid plaques are a universal hallmark of Alzheimer’s but not necessarily the cause. Agreed.
The thing that worries me about this is that the systemic formation of amyloid plaques would explain so many, if not all of the severe adverse events that we are seeing in VAERS and other adverse event reporting systems. To me, it would explain myocarditis.”
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Explanatory Note: What is amyloidosis?
Amyloidosis (am-uh-loi-DO-sis) is a rare disease that occurs when an abnormal protein, called amyloid, builds up in your organs and interferes with their normal function.
Amyloid isn’t normally found in the body, but it can be formed from several different types of protein. Organs that may be affected include the heart, kidneys, liver, spleen, nervous system and digestive tract.
Some varieties of amyloidosis occur in association with other diseases. These types may improve with treatment of the underlying disease. Some varieties of amyloidosis may lead to life-threatening organ failure.
Treatments may include chemotherapy similar to that used to combat cancer. Your doctor may suggest medications to reduce amyloid production and to control symptoms. Some people may benefit from organ or stem cell transplants.
Never. That requires critical thought skills.