https://jessicar.substack.com/p/igg4-related-disease-igg4rd-means
A recent paper published in Science confirms what many of us have been saying for well over a year now: repeated injections with modified mRNA encapsulated by LNPs messes up your immune system.
It messes it up in a specific way. We have evidence from this work that the fibrosis and organ destruction we are witnessing in countless numbers of folks post COVID injection, is due to the shots and more specifically, likely due to the eventual class switching to IgG4 and subsequent prevalence (perhaps dominance) of this antibody subclass.
. . . But EDS and causation are not what I want to focus on, for now. I would like to redirect to Type III collagen deposition in large blood vessels. This reminds me of something, and gets me back to why I started researching connective tissue disorders 3 weeks ago, in the first place. These rubbery, proteinaceous deposits that embalmers are claiming to be pulling out of cadavers (I haven't seen this with my eyes yet), are likely collagen deposits. It would be easy to check: collagen in mammal skin has a lot of glycine-X-hydroxyproline motifs.31
Question: What would happen if Type III collagen deposition in large blood vessels got out control for some reason? How would that manifest? Would it manifest as long, fibrous, collagen-rich obstructions in these vessels? Hmm? I bet my bottom dollar that if those things pulled out of cadavers were compared to any normal collagen-rich materials, they would have close to identical compositions.
Collagen turns liquid blood to gel. It increases platelet production. It’s basically like adding gelatin to your blood.
Soooo, it doesn't strengthen hair & fingernails or make skin more supple? 😬
Maybe they should stop selling it as a supplement and just use it for other things, like floor mats
You're not understanding the process that is being claimed to happen.
Collagen is good for us in the correct amounts. Yes, if you add a thickening or clotting agent to a liquid it thickens or clots, who knew?
Collagen is good for our skin, and it's good for our joint health (specific types).
What they are proclaiming as fact, and again without cause or research or studying, is that the deposition of collagen as a natural part of our biology is interrupted and ends up depositing into the blood stream and building up in the arteries.
You literally consume collagen with almost any meat based meal you consume. If you have ever had soup or stew or used, say, chicken spines, you are getting collagen.
She's positing a theory, yes, but "without cause or research or studying" is misleading. She provides 33 endnotes, and says "This reminds me of something, and gets me back to why I started researching connective tissue disorders 3 weeks ago, in the first place."
Jessica is a tenacious and detail-oriented scientist; this particular substack posted today is more of a progress report on a new line of inquiry than a finished product.
Jessica Rose Dr. Jessica Rose is a Canadian researcher with a Bachelor's Degree in Applied Mathematics and a Master's degree in Immunology from Memorial University of Newfoundland. She also holds a PhD in Computational Biology from Bar Ilan University and 2 Post Doctoral degrees: one in Molecular Biology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and one in Biochemistry from the Technion Institute of Technology. She was also accepted for a 2-month program as a senior researcher at the Weizmann Institute prior to completion of her latest post doctoral degree at the Technion. Her more recent research efforts are aimed at descriptive analysis of the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) data in efforts to make this data accessible to the public.
okay, Thank you! I am an animal protein devotee, and I have also stirred powdered collagen in my coffee, so I got a little nervous. I appreciate your reply