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To: Cercyon
This is scary:

There is a dose-response with the vaccine, such that the greater the number of vaccine doses, the higher the risk of spike protein injury.
“The more the patients are exposed to spike [proteins], the more severe the disease,” said Marik.
Both long COVID and injury from COVID-19 vaccines are driven by a prolonged exposure to spike proteins through infection and vaccination respectively, he explained.
Dr. Flavio Cadegianni hypothesized that receiving COVID-19 vaccines after having had COVID-19 increases one’s risk of spike protein injury. This is because vaccines likely trigger a higher amount of spike protein load in the bloodstream than a common COVID-19 infection.

So the more vaccine doses you receive (two shots and two boosters, for example), the more likelihood of spike protein injury. That makes sense because you frequently hear of someone injured or dying after the second Covid shoot.

11 posted on 10/20/2022 11:54:56 AM PDT by CedarDave (Pfizer's boosters: You just turned your immune system's functionality into a subscription service!)
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To: CedarDave; SeekAndFind; null and void; All

I wonder if having more time between vacs and boosters reduces the risk of spike injury. Do spike protein numbers reduce over time? I took J&J May 2021 and the booster in Oct. Does J&J produce as much spike protein? Since a year has passed would I be less at risk if I boost this Nov. if I can find J&J?


13 posted on 10/27/2022 10:06:55 PM PDT by gleeaikin (Question authority!)
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