Saw this and immediately thought...COVFEFE !
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Would explain the pictures of the darker colored blood in the blood bags after donation, the higher the iron, the darker the blood. I did blood draws for years, always checking hemoglobin before drawing, HGb is the protein in the blood that carries the iron, higher the HGb, thicker the blood, and the thicker blood would always give you trouble, as it was sludgy and often clotted before you could get to the minimum amount of 420 ml. If it was under that, we had to throw it out.
So people with higher iron are more prone to blood clots? And COVID attacks hemoglobin if I remember correctly, so this could mean COVID is harder on people with higher iron?
Am I right on this
Probably, the body will often react to certain situations to create more HGb, such as a smoker will have higher HGb, or people who live at higher altitudes, but that would be a very slow change over time, the body would adjust, a sudden increase would certainly be a shock to the system, I could see it causing all of the complications that have been reported, the hemoglobin carries not only the iron, it carries the oxygen in the blood. The clots were due to the thickness of the blood in the phlebotomy setting, it would slow the flow down so much it would give the platelets enough time to clot the blood in the needle.
It's where the iron is that's important as well IMO
If it's bound to haem it's not an oxidant in the body, but if the red blood cells are lysed and it's free in the blood, it's poisonous.
I agree https://irondisorders.org/iron-tiggers-free-radical-activity/
Was just thinking the same.
Precocious, since this is your field, do you know of any blood banks? Or how a person who has not had the vaxx can store some of their blood in case it's ever needed - and they won't have to take blood that was from a vaxxed person? Thanks!
Blood banks are done several ways, depending on where you live, in the US they're regional, they're either independent not for profits, run by local hospitals, or ran by the red cross, you can go to your local bloodbank and request an autologous ( your own) or directed ( family member or friend who matches your type) donation. In my bloodbank there was a time period to store it, blood is only good for 42 days, and isn't the best option after frozen. My bloodbank required a doctor to sign off on the blood request and generally it was done within a month of a planned procedure where it might be needed. Testing will be done on directeds and they still have to pass a standard physical exam and screening questionairre. Edit: just type your area code and bloodbank into a search engine, should give you what you need to contact them.
Thank you for the info. I guess there aren't any near me because I can't find any info. I looked quite a while back, as this has always been of interest to me. Then of course the whole vaxx thing brought it back and I checked again. :o( You'd think it would be a 'thing.'
You could try a search like blood donation near me, if yours is run by the local hospital it might not show up in a search using the term bloodbank 🤔😁
There is also a theory that the HGb is being stripped from the red blood cells, thus preventing the carrying of O2 from the lungs to the rest of the body (also, CO2 out of the body).
Could it be some combination of high iron, low oxygen, high carbon dioxide that explains some of the health problems observed?
I would think it would realease the iron into the system as free floating, unbound, so in my opinion it would, but I'm not a doctor, iron overload causes much of the symptoms I've read about that are associated though.