Not likely, honestly. Thrombotic events, yes in people with antiphospholipid antibodies (which is 1/20 of the population, by the way) with additional predisposing factors. Guillan-Barre syndrome and anaphylaxis, absolutely - that'll happen with any drug, vaccine, or injectable anything if you give it to enough people. And the fact that cardiolipin is a part of some of these vaccines, frankly, is horridly irresponsible considering that that particular lipid is a) part of our own mitochondrial inner membranes, and b) when it gets into the bloodstream, signals to your immune system that things have gone horribly wrong, like a heart attack or gangrene. In of itself, though, that's more likely to prompt autoimmune responses rather than sepsis.
The aluminum they include as adjuvants for any vaccine primes the immune system to get hyper-reactive to any potential bug - viral, bacterial, fungal, whatever - and that diminishes the likelihood of sepsis occurring. Potentially, if a vaccine contained a super-high dose of mRNA, enough to pump out as much spike protein as, say, a high payload of the virus itself, then yes you might get enough increased vascular permeability that sepsis could happen in more people than normal. But from the point of pathology, sepsis is much more likely to happen when you do something that actively suppresses the immune system - like being on corticosteroids, or TNF inhibitors for rheumatoid arthritis, etc.
Wow thanks for the explanation. I’ll add this to my health folder I’m keeping for research.
Been keeping track of every article med study I can download about everything related to Covid the cures the shot etc. etc.
I have over 1100 documents and thousands of web sites archived.
Isn’t sepsis on of the maladies that happen to those that take the shot?
Not likely, honestly. Thrombotic events, yes in people with antiphospholipid antibodies (which is 1/20 of the population, by the way) with additional predisposing factors. Guillan-Barre syndrome and anaphylaxis, absolutely - that'll happen with any drug, vaccine, or injectable anything if you give it to enough people. And the fact that cardiolipin is a part of some of these vaccines, frankly, is horridly irresponsible considering that that particular lipid is a) part of our own mitochondrial inner membranes, and b) when it gets into the bloodstream, signals to your immune system that things have gone horribly wrong, like a heart attack or gangrene. In of itself, though, that's more likely to prompt autoimmune responses rather than sepsis.
The aluminum they include as adjuvants for any vaccine primes the immune system to get hyper-reactive to any potential bug - viral, bacterial, fungal, whatever - and that diminishes the likelihood of sepsis occurring. Potentially, if a vaccine contained a super-high dose of mRNA, enough to pump out as much spike protein as, say, a high payload of the virus itself, then yes you might get enough increased vascular permeability that sepsis could happen in more people than normal. But from the point of pathology, sepsis is much more likely to happen when you do something that actively suppresses the immune system - like being on corticosteroids, or TNF inhibitors for rheumatoid arthritis, etc.
Wow thanks for the explanation. I’ll add this to my health folder I’m keeping for research. Been keeping track of every article med study I can download about everything related to Covid the cures the shot etc. etc. I have over 1100 documents and thousands of web sites archived.