Here's some articles on the history of Adeno vectors, including ones where the authors point out that shedding occurs (for instance, from parent to child). The media has been arguing that this mysterious hepatitis in children must come out of the blue, since not all kids have had shots.
Indeed, and there is a nightmare scenario of downregulation not only of BRCA & P53, but the P53 itself forming an amyloidogenic complex with spike protein:
S2 Subunit of SARS-nCoV-2 Interacts with Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 and BRCA: an In Silico Study (2020)
Experimental gene therapy transfections and public health implications
Thanks, interesting take on CMV's potentially being the good guys (or less bad). We just need more genomic analysis ASAP. I'm sure there must be more than one answer too, such studies will make compelling reading.
Here's some articles on the history of Adeno vectors, including ones where the authors point out that shedding occurs (for instance, from parent to child). The media has been arguing that this mysterious hepatitis in children must come out of the blue, since not all kids have had shots.
https://medquotes.substack.com/p/adenovirus-vectors
Thanks for the link. Hopefully cases will decline with lower jab rates.
Good lord. What a damned shitshow.
And then thereās this compelling (and terrifying) theory from Walter M Chestnut that has much larger implications:
https://wmcresearch.substack.com/p/are-the-cases-of-hepatitis-in-children?r=ydcjg&utm_campaign=post&utm_source=ARE%20THE%20CASES%20OF%20%22HEPATITIS%22%20IN%20CHILDREN%20ACTUALLY%20SPIKE%20PROTEIN%20AMYLOIDOSIS%20OF%20THE%20LIVER?&utm_medium=ios
Indeed, and there is a nightmare scenario of downregulation not only of BRCA & P53, but the P53 itself forming an amyloidogenic complex with spike protein:
S2 Subunit of SARS-nCoV-2 Interacts with Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 and BRCA: an In Silico Study (2020)
Experimental gene therapy transfections and public health implications
https://doorlesscarp953.substack.com/p/s2-subunit-of-sars-ncov-2-interacts?s=w
Thanks, interesting take on CMV's potentially being the good guys (or less bad). We just need more genomic analysis ASAP. I'm sure there must be more than one answer too, such studies will make compelling reading.