Scientists at Stanford University have found that those ‘safe and effective’ Covid jabs people were coerced into taking, can actually cause heart damage by triggering immune cells to go on the attack.
They now say that immune systems triggered by the mRNA jabs may inflame cardiac cells, with young men most at risk.
The findings come as the US Food and Drug Administration say they plan to place a “black box” warning, the agency’s most serious safety label, on Covid-19 vaccines.
Meanwhile the covid virus appears to have taken a back seat this year with the media and health authorities relentlessly pushing the flu jab due to an unprecendented super flu that is rapidly spreading, causing schools to close and the NHS to panic. Some good news though…the staff haven’t started dancing yet.
The Telegraph reports: The majority of cardiac problems were caused by mRNA jabs, such as Pfizer and Moderna, which delivered a blueprint of the Covid spike protein to cells.
Now Stanford University has found that the immune system can lock on to the foreign RNA from the vaccine, which triggers a fierce response and in some cases can inflame heart cells. It is likely to be a problem with other mRNA jabs, they warn.
Prof Joseph Wu, the director of Stanford Cardiovascular Institute, said: “Overall, our study shows that the vaccine serves its intended purpose of inducing memory immune response against future infections.
“However, in the acute phase, the vaccine can induce cytokine – immune signal proteins – release that makes the patients feel bad, for example, fever, muscle pain and joint aches that are usually relieved by ibuprofen, but very rarely can cause myocarditis.
“Your body needs these cytokines to ward off viruses. It’s essential to immune response but can become toxic in large amounts. In the future, one can design better/safer vaccines that preserve the long-term memory response and mitigate the short-term cytokine release.”
Scientists have been excited about mRNA vaccines because they can be altered rapidly to keep up with new or mutating diseases, simply by altering the blueprint they carry.
They instruct cells to make a part of the pathogen, but in rare cases, they can cause an overreaction from parts of the immune system, which are on the hunt for foreign DNA or RNA, which typically comes from viruses.
