Thirty years ago I suffered an anaphylactic shock. It was fairly mild as I didn't lose consciousness but I came close. I was rushed to the nearest hospital where a quick check found that my blood pressure was dangerously low. I was given cetirizine hydrochloride to combat the allergic reaction.
I don't know for certain what caused the sudden attack but I suspect that one of my work colleagues put something in my drink.
Anyway, I recovered within minutes but six months later all my hair follicles were dead. My hair was falling out in clumps. I lost every hair on my body and my fingernails were cracking. A consultant told me that I was lucky because an anaphylactic shock such as I'd experienced can cause the autoimmune system to attack anything or everything. For me, it chose the keratin-producing cells. But it could have attacked the pancreas (type 1 diabetes), the myelin sheath around nerves (multiple sclerosis), the heart valves or many other things.
So, a warning: having a "faint" after an injection might sound like nothing but it could be life-changing.
(Feel free to re-post this on social media.)
Thank you for posting...interesting article on a condition I had never heard of. It makes me wonder if this is genetic (appears to be) or if certain situations can exacerbate this condition. Immunity is very interesting indeed!
No worries. It is more rare than they say. My Dr says about 1/4500 White people will have symptoms...
Nobody else in my family has or had any such problem with autoimmunity afaik.
I'm not planning on visiting a doctor in the near future if I can possibly avoid it! But maybe after the mask mandate is lifted and they admit that Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroqine are not dangerous. Then I might be able to have a rational discussion.
Nobody in my family has this deficiency, either. The good news is they also diagnosed me with mixed connective tissue disease and have me a script for... Hydroxychloroquine! Nobody has said shit about the vaccine, either.
HCQ is officially "contra-indicated" for anyone with psoriasis. But I took a course anyway, just to find out, and it didn't seem to affect me in any way.