Still Free

Yeah, Mr. Smiley. Made it through the entire Trump presidency without being enslaved. Imagine that.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

Mysterious Liver Ailment

 I saw some rumblings about this online last week and now I've seen an article on it.



"Mysterious liver ailment" with "no known cause".

You know, I work in IT. Whenever there is a computer problem, the first thing I ask is "what happened on the system recently". Because most of the time something "new" happened and that "new" thing triggered the bad behaviour.

Well, we have a rash of  hepatitis with "no known cause" so we should be asking what happened recently?  Let's look at this article.

"

More than 160 cases of severe pediatric hepatitis, or liver inflammation, in kids without existing health issues have been reported from about a dozen countries, including the U.K., Canada and Japan. The disorder has been seen mainly in children younger than 10 and has left a few needing liver transplants. Researchers are probing links to infection with adenoviruses, a family of pathogens that more commonly cause cold-like symptoms, as well as Covid-19."

Adenoviruses you say? That's interesting. Why? Well because the current COVID vaccines use adenovirus for delivery:

"The currently administered vaccines depend on adenovirus DNA vectors or on SARS-CoV-2 mRNA that might become reverse transcribed into DNA, however infrequently."

Oh.

"The review also addresses problems of remaining adenoviral gene expression in adenoviral-based vectors and their role in side effects of vaccines."

Side effects from "adenoviral-based vectors"? Say what ARE those side effects? And say, wouldn't a person want to know what those effects are PRIOR to taking one of those vaccines? And did anyone who mandated these vaccines consider any of these "side effects"?

"Eventually, it will come down to weighing the possible risks of genomic insertions of vaccine-associated foreign DNA and unknown levels of vector-carried adenoviral gene expression versus protection against the dangers of Covid-19." 

Eventually. Like, this is all a test and eventually we find out the results. If they're bad, well, sucks to be you I suppose.

Adenovirus particles likely are taken up by cells of the lymphatic system and the liver, and their DNA will be transported to the cells’ nuclei. In this review, the evidence for insertion of adenovirus DNA into recipient genomes and its consequences has been presented.[my underlines]

Now that paper showed research in mice. For all we know the stuff we're seeing in children is the "eventually".

But since children under 5, at least in the US, cannot get a vaccine that has the adenovirus, I cannot say that it is *due to* the vaccine for that population. But for those over 5 years of age, we should be asking about their vaccination status. After all it IS the one major thing that is different.