Nah. Magnetoferritin is not what you should be worried about. If anything, it's a cool distraction from the things you should be worried about, like myocarditis from Pfizer.
Magnetoferritin is just a nanocarrier, it is safe, and essentially iron bound to proteins injected into your bloodstream.
Here's an interesting fact - Covid-19 and low serum iron - or iron deficiency - are correlated. Infected areas basically gather what little iron there is, and the condition worsens significantly when you have iron deficiency. https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/7/7/ofaa250/5860447 Magnetoferritin is simply serum iron. It's pretty useful, biomedically.
What did we have a shortage of during the 2020 Covid outbreak, and what were stores limiting purchases of?
If anything, the 'magnet conspiracy' is the manipulation of the community by bad actors that use a truth as a battering ram to make us look insane. Sort of like what Alex Jones does.
No, I'm just an investigator, I put together pieces and solve problems, and I'm pretty quick about it when the ball gets rolling. Sometimes you can see it happen right in front of you...
Hence why I have to say my comment above that you replied to originally, is incorrect. Magnetoferritin isn't a substitute for iron deficient folks, it's a tool - used to locate cancer cells, as a "light" injected inside the body, making it easy to see. See pic hot-linked in the sentence.
As I was researching tonight, I remembered something Trump was barraged with hate for - his "disinfectant" comment, where he said this:
When the cancerous cells are identified, they can be targeted by an electromagnetic field or light, which would heat the cells and subsequently cause death.
I only now realized that Trump paraphrased exactly the concept presented within that article. 'Light' in body, acquire target, destroy target with 'light.' He dumbs down his vocabulary consistently - probably went overboard enough for defenders to think "UV Light" and the moronic haters to think "lysol."
I've been obsessed with magnetics for the past month for reasons related to US Military scientist Salvatore Pais (check him out if you feel like learning about the "ufos" declassed by the Pentagon) but I had no idea that they were already mainstream biomedical items. I speculate that "magnetism" is going to be the future of medicine.
Nah. Magnetoferritin is not what you should be worried about. If anything, it's a cool distraction from the things you should be worried about, like myocarditis from Pfizer.
Magnetoferritin is just a nanocarrier, it is safe, and essentially iron bound to proteins injected into your bloodstream.
Here's an interesting fact - Covid-19 and low serum iron - or iron deficiency - are correlated. Infected areas basically gather what little iron there is, and the condition worsens significantly when you have iron deficiency. https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/7/7/ofaa250/5860447 Magnetoferritin is simply serum iron. It's pretty useful, biomedically.
What did we have a shortage of during the 2020 Covid outbreak, and what were stores limiting purchases of?
Red meat.
If anything, the 'magnet conspiracy' is the manipulation of the community by bad actors that use a truth as a battering ram to make us look insane. Sort of like what Alex Jones does.
I have to ask, is your profession related to biomedical field ? Wondering how someone would build up a knowledge of all this.
No, I'm just an investigator, I put together pieces and solve problems, and I'm pretty quick about it when the ball gets rolling. Sometimes you can see it happen right in front of you...
Hence why I have to say my comment above that you replied to originally, is incorrect. Magnetoferritin isn't a substitute for iron deficient folks, it's a tool - used to locate cancer cells, as a "light" injected inside the body, making it easy to see. See pic hot-linked in the sentence.
As I was researching tonight, I remembered something Trump was barraged with hate for - his "disinfectant" comment, where he said this:
It proves the concept behind the following article -
https://www.biotechniques.com/cancer-research/magnetoferritin-a-new-effective-marker-for-tumor-diagnosis-and-treatment/
I only now realized that Trump paraphrased exactly the concept presented within that article. 'Light' in body, acquire target, destroy target with 'light.' He dumbs down his vocabulary consistently - probably went overboard enough for defenders to think "UV Light" and the moronic haters to think "lysol."
I've been obsessed with magnetics for the past month for reasons related to US Military scientist Salvatore Pais (check him out if you feel like learning about the "ufos" declassed by the Pentagon) but I had no idea that they were already mainstream biomedical items. I speculate that "magnetism" is going to be the future of medicine.