To make a king story short..
Sister in law is big into ‘vaccines, boosters, still masks, loves Bernie Sanders .. I think you know the type.
Anyways, she had the flu about one month ago, supposedly had food poisoning the week after, and now the last two weeks has been to the emergency room 4 or 5 times with migraines and head aches.. no history of migraines, shes 37 years old.. it so bad she’s actually flying hundreds of miles back to home to stay with her mom.. I told her to ask for scans for blood clotting..
I’m not a doctor but 1) anyone with anything similar ? Any ideas to help her?
- I can’t believe the number of people I know severely I’ll currently with flu viruses.. and literally everyone one of them was vaccine and booster takers. I’m talking 5 or 6 families I know with 104 degree flu crap going on and it’s an ongoing thing for some of them. Is this anecdotal?! It can’t be..
Not a doctor, but aspirin thins the blood and prevents blood clots forming because of anti-platelet hyperactivation properties.
It sounds lame to say aspirin for the migraines - most people prefer something 'stronger'. However, I have noticed that when buying painkillers in the supermarket there is a rack of alternatives, and only one little corner for aspirin. Coinkidink? Maybe. Incompetence? I hope so.
We now carry aspirin to work, there is always someone complaining of headache (most are vaxxies). But it is my opinion that an aspirin a day keeps the brain strokes away....
From my small amount of research, it seems like the way that aspirin slows blood clots is by it's action on the COX-1 enzyme by deactivation. By preventing a upstream reaction facilitated by COX, cells stop making thromboxane, which slows clotting in the body.
Most common OTC NSAIDs, which is to say Aspirin, Ibuprofen/Advil, and Naproxen/Naproxen Sodium/Aleve, prevent pain via interfering with COX-1 in the body, which is to say they all should have similar anti-clotting effects due to their similar actions on the thromboxane production pathway in the body. Minor note that this doesn't include acetominophin, which isn't actually a NSAID.
I'd still carry aspirin though, just in case.