"Scientists at Walter Reed Army Institute Develop Vaccine ‘Effective Against COVID-19 and All Variants, Including Omicron" ...
(www.theepochtimes.com)
🧐 Research Wanted 🤔
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (205)
sorted by:
I took ivermectin and the entire Zelenko protocol starting on Day 1. I still required monoclonal antibodies due to nervous system and vascular dysfunction caused by COVID.
My Vitamin D levels are well above average. I still got wrecked by this thing.
This ~vitamin deficiency~ theory does not work for a solid chunk of the population. That needs to be accepted; it doesn’t negate the ineffectiveness of the current vaccines, the ridiculousness of current hospitalization and care guidelines, and the fact masks do nothing.
But this thing attacks the nervous and vascular systems aggressively, and some people can take as many vitamins as possible and still get screwed by the China Virus.
My dad survived, but he lost 15 lbs in five days. He had to be hospitalized; he also received the Zelenko vitamins while in the hospital but the inflammation is still ravaging his body.
It’s not as simple as you’re making it out to be; I learned this, regrettably, from personal experience.
You survived. Did you have any long term effects?
Its not "theory" so much as backed by statistical evidence.
Maybe for you, but that is not shown in the data to be occurring to a large percentage of the population, at least not from what I have seen. If you have data that supports this assertion in a statistical way I would like to see it.
Perhaps there is a genetic predisposition in your family for this disease. Again, I go by statistics, not anecdotes. While I do not in any way doubt your word, your statements are not supported by the aggregate data, which suggests it is not a widespread issue, even if it can be true for an individual.
Personal experience is a terrible way to inform a populations decisions. Due to the variance in response, statistics is the only reasonable way to inform a larger group, assuming such statistics are available.
I avoided the neuroinflammation by hitting my FSM machine hard.
My parents, on the other hand, now have lung scarring and non-essential tremor. The tremor was so apparent the nurses commented on it suddenly developing when my father was in the hospital. He also now has POTS.
None of us can get rid of the BPPV.
In terms of statistical evidence for vitamins, you’re only looking at 43% improvement and 57% sufficiency. In comparison, sotrovimab has been shown to improve outcomes in 80% of patients. Even ivermectin has better results than what you linked me here.
One study looking at orthostatic issues post COVID infection in millions of patients.
Small case study of six patients who were never hospitalized but developed dysautonomia.
Another study looking at POTS and tachycardia.
Autonomic dysfunction being the potential cause of ARDS, tachycardia, and mortality in COVID patients.
More than 50% left with symptoms in post-acute phase after several months.
Dysautonomia is happening more than it’s being reported in the MSM; its prevalence is being discussed on forums for medical professionals. I only know this because my PCP has discussed the developments of treatment and disease research with me extensively over the past couple of months. Her whole family got COVID in early autumn; her husband had a stroke from it about a month later, and she has multiple long haulers she’s treating, both vaccinated and unvaccinated. Hence why she’s been researching autonomic dysfunction so extensively.
For the record, though, there’s a god awful website claiming everything under the sun is a symptom of PACS and long haul COVID dysautonomia. That is BS, full stop. But tachycardia, heart murmurs, POTS, etc. are issues from the disease itself as well as the neuroinflammation it leaves behind. Hence why you lose your sense of smell—it attacks the nerve cells of the olfactory bulb. Anosmia doesn’t seem to happen with Omicron, so hopefully it has settled down on the neurological attack front.
I’m an econometrician by trade. I understand statistical analysis and inference. I didn’t want to get into the nitty-gritty in my original post as I am stuck posting from my phone until I reset my password, so I gave a personal example. Big woop.
I only linked you vitamin D. Look at Zinc. Look at Vitamin D + Zinc + Vitamin C together (which is what the data suggests is optimal). I linked you a start to the evidence chain, not the end.
I agree the data supports that the S-protein attacks these tissues, but the data also supports the protective qualities of Vitamin D + Zinc for exactly these tissues for the exact same reason (ACE-2 receptor -- S-protein interation/shutdown/vitamin attributed upregulation).