I found this abstract, but I’m still confused. I’m healthy, I just thought I remember that name and a tv character having early ALS.
TV would never lie to me, right?
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33766600/
Thanks for the link and citation. Of this I was unaware, so much being on all our plates. I think this reinforces some conclusion I am drawing. Such "aggregation and formation of solid fibrils" seems a phrase worth further research. When one considers the early data -- which the manufacturer and government both thought they might suppress for decades until outcry turned that off -- shows so many seemingly unrelated death and injury phenomena that this might be among those missing links. When an organ fails massively, there is an internal cause which only autopsy might reveal.
As these comments cluster under "dies suddenly" and asserted to be in the millions, excess deaths (and excess spontaneous abortions and stillbirths) might well suggest "failure" from, in part, "aggregation and formation of solid fibrils." Time for many more autopsies.