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c Anderson's avatar

I wish Dr. Ryan Cole would make a move to define it and give it a name. I believe he has the expertise. I guess I won’t hold my breath for that to take place anytime soon. Thanks for your summary and resources on the derangement of epithelial cells by spike protein. You have pulled everything together and added clarity to this mystery!

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c Anderson's avatar

I am wondering when a scientific name will be applied to the spike protein clots as they are not normal blood clots as we know them?

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Jaime Jessop's avatar

The medical establishment needs to acknowledge that they exist first. We haven't even got to that stage yet.

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Mark Beasley's avatar

I'm also betting that the released amyloids would easily become folded. This would continue as long as the clotting and vessel irritation. The result would look like a rubberized material, which is just what they are looking at to create plastics out of plant material instead of petroleum.

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Duchess's avatar

I will remember this. I expect shortly you will be proved right by overwhelming evidence.

Unfortunately, I think that most of the media and Health Authorities will continue to ignore the clots...

and teh relationship. And keep pushing them NO MATTER WHAT THE SCIENCE PROVES.

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Gary Sharpe's avatar

I think there are endothelial cells everywhere... I looked into this in relation to Parkinson's - blood-brain-barrier, retina, gut, kidneys... if so this explains why forms of damage is so widespread - and links to Parkinson's like symptoms or due to the spike...

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Jaime Jessop's avatar

As they form the lining of the vascular system, they would be everywhere, including the brain, and the spike can definitely cross the blood-brain barrier. Misfolding of proteins/amyloid plaques forming in brain tissue due to the presence of spike? I think the experts are already on it. No wonder there are so many reports of 'brain fog'.

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