"Abstract
COVID-19 vaccines in particular mRNA and DNA vaccines have been proposed and used worldwide but they have been recognized to be associated with or being the cause of various side effects. Generally mild but also more severe side effects have been observed such as thrombosis, myocarditis, hepatitis, neurological side effects, and menstruation perturbations which are accessible and described in official registries (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS-CDC, EudraVigilance). The purpose of this article is to summarize and discuss immuno-inflammatory and other biochemical mechanisms that may be common to both COVID-19 pathology and vaccination side effects using mRNA and DNA technologies which induce the human body’s production of a close replica of the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2.
We propose that the main inflammatory pathway may be the activation of the complement system... Others [sic] key toxic pathways are the activation of [des-Arg9] -bradykinin...dysregulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system as well as the attenuation of the Mas receptor activity... Also the crucial importance of oxidative stress associated to inflammatory processes has been largely underestimated....
...Therefore, the spike protein from the vaccines in particular in its free form, is potentially able to trigger the same inflammatory processes as the virus spike protein.
...it is justified to investigate more deeply and to propose mechanisms for both COVID-19 disease and vaccine side effects in all the organs where they have been reported. Severe side effects are difficult to assess and there is currently no consensus on the exact counts. Of note, the US VAERS database provide a signal that appears significant and sometimes associated mortality which may be largely underestimated.
...the toxicity of vaccine-induced spike protein has been neglected and underestimated since the beginning of the biggest mass vaccination in History, especially regarding what is already known on the high toxicity of spike protein."
https://fortunejournals.org/ojs/index.php/ami/index
Copyright
All published work with Archive of Microbiology & Immunology is permanently available in online without any restriction to the reader. Articles published in Archives of Microbiology & Immunology will be Open Access articles distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License