Posted on 05/16/2025 1:29:18 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Amazing.
I’m happy if the outcome is good for the baby but this stuff scares the heck out of me.
You’re not alone.
“...losing their baby...”
That has a specific meaning in English.
Was the treatment performed in utero?
But the LAST thing that I want to see happening is the creation of Khan Noonien Singh.
KHAAAAAAAAAN!
> Was the treatment performed in utero?
Nope, post birth.
I need no shortage of gene therapy for no shortage of old age conditions....
THIS is the appropriate use of mRNA technology, correcting existing defects, not creating them with mutagens mislabeled as “vaccines”.
It’s a rare condition yet 350 million people have it? Did I read this wrong?
Nope. Nope. Nope.
3 births a year in the US is considered rare.
“THIS is the appropriate use of mRNA technology”
THIS is not mRNA tech.
It does me, too, but I do know an older man who has an enzyme deficiency that has caused him problems his whole life and he volunteered to be a test subject for the procedure.
I guess they didn’t even know if he’d survive it not because it’s dangerous but it’s believer and not afraid of dying.
Most new treatments can be scary but five years from now it will be routine.
Out of 7 billion is rather rare.
It’s hard to tell from the original article if they are employing mRNA to deliver the CRISPR altered material.
But it does mention lipid nanoparticles, and those are used to encase mRNA so that your body’s enzymes don’t destroy it before it can do something useful. That was Robert Malone’s great discovery.
So it does sound like mRNA could be the delivery system that they are using. If it’s what I think they are doing, the mRNA would instruct the boy’s own defective liver cells to produce genetically corrected versions that can produce the missing enzyme.
The CRISPR part would precede this. It would start with one of his own liver cells, use CRISPR to add the missing enzyme sequence, and then use the resulting DNA to “express” the mRNA code for the corrected cell.
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