COVID Jabs form Spike Proteins

For three years, doctors and scientists have been documenting serious injuries
to the heart muscle of COVID vaccine recipients.

These injuries typically present as inflammation of the heart muscle (myocarditis) or inflammation of the sac around the heart (pericarditis). Now, German researchers have discovered the precise mechanisms of injury behind the Pfizer and Moderna COVID jabs. It turns out that the mRNA vaccines can form spike proteins in heart cells, leading to irregular heart contractions and full blown cardiomyopathy.

Researchers find mechanisms of injury behind COVID jabs.
Within 48 hours of vaccination, the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are designed to transcribe a specific sequence of coronavirus spike protein in the deltoid muscle of vaccine recipients. The mRNA transcription process is intended to hijack protein synthesis of human cells at the vaccination site, to ultimately summon immune responsive cells. The foreign spike proteins are supposed to be neutralized in the deltoid muscle, leaving behind an enduring immune response. This was the promise of vaccine makers, but scientists are finding out that the transcription process and the neutralization of spike proteins does not work as advertised, and the transcription process can even harm vital organs. Not only is the immune response insufficient with these vaccines, but the spike proteins can also be transcribed in heart cells, causing serious and life-threatening risks to the vaccine recipient.

In the study – Cardiac side effects of RNA-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccines:
Hidden cardio-toxic effects of mRNA-1273 and BNT162b2 on ventricular myocyte function and structure – researchers found something very troubling about the current mRNA medical experiment, something that may have repercussions for human health for many years to come.
In just 48 hours, both the Pfizer and Moderna covid vaccines caused distinct cell abnormalities, suggesting that the body may reject synthetic mRNA synthesis and
have a toxicity reaction within the cells.
“The findings support both the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac events following mRNA-based COVID vaccination,” the authors wrote. They also said the findings help explain the persistent cardiac symptoms that are observed among long-COVID patients. Most long-COVID patients have been vaccinated with Pfizer and Moderna jabs.

The standard dosage for the Moderna jab is 100 micrograms and dosage for Pfizer is 30 micrograms. The study authors introduced the mRNA vaccines to cell cultures from rat and human heart cells and administered both the Pfizer and Moderna at 100 micrograms. Within 48 hours, the heart cells were replicating spike proteins, causing abnormal heart contractions. Heart cells inundated with Pfizer’s spike proteins showed increased protein kinase A (PKA) activity and stronger heart contractions.
Heart cells inundated with Moderna’s spike proteins had disrupted calcium
regulation and developed irregular arrhythmic and irregular peristaltic heart contractions.
The researchers traced the damage back to disturbances among the RyR2 receptors,
which coordinate heart contractions using calcium.

COVID jabs cause more than myocarditis: They also cause cardiomyopathy
The researchers compared normal contractions in unvaccinated rat heart cells
with the abnormal contractions found in vaccinated heart cells. The researchers concluded that the COVID jabs cause damage at the cellular level, damage that aligns closer with cardiomyopathy than it does with myocarditis. In myocarditis, the heart tissue is inflamed. In cardiomyopathy, the heart muscles suffer toxic stress and become both structurally and functionally abnormal in the absence of other heart diseases.
The newly-discovered pathology of cardiomyopathy explains why young, previously healthy people are dying post-vaccination. This evidence could prove vital for future court cases against the covid-19 vaccine makers. The research paper was expedited to a rapid communication paper and was published more quickly than a standard research article because the scientists believe that the findings need to be shared immediately with the academic community.
“The present preclinical cardiac safety data point to the need for a reassessment
of the risk–benefit ratio of RNA-based SARS-Cov-2 vaccines, given indication of their cardiotoxicity,” the authors wrote. The heart abnormalities exhibited in the cells, likely caused by disruption to RyR2 and increased PKA protein levels, “are risk factors for sudden cardiac death, ventricular tachyarrhythmias and contractile dysfunction,”
they added.

Sources include:
TheEpochTimes.com
BPSPubs.OnlineLibrary.Wiley.com

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Tagged Under: Big PharmacardiomyopathycardiotoxinCensored Sciencediscoverieshealth scienceheart arrythmiasheart attackheart contractionsheart diseaseheart healthModernamyocarditisPfizer
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Nobel Prize in Medicine awarded to two mRNA developers,
whose technology has been used to kill millions

10/04/2023 / By Lance D Johnson
The Nobel Peace Prize is being weaponized to promote one of the greatest vaccine
failures of our time and one of the most injurious and deadliest medical experiments to ever be forced onto the global population. The 2023 Nobel Prize in Medicine was recently awarded to two of the scientists who helped develop the mRNA technology behind the COVID “vaccines.”
The once-sacred award ceremony left out other scientists who also played a critical role
in the development of the mRNA platform. The most notable omission was Dr. Robert Malone, who has been a vocal critic of the so-called COVID vaccine. Malone has stood up for the vaccine injured and repeatedly provided real-world data documenting the serious and life-threatening risks associated with the jab.

The future of mRNA’s many lucrative applications hang in the balance
On Monday, October 2, 2023, the Karolinska Institute in Sweden awarded
the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman – two of the scientists who helped discover nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of the mRNA vaccine technology. The scientists were congratulated by the Director of the World Health Organization – General Tedros Ghebreyesus. The corrupt WHO director described their mRNA technology as “safe and effective vaccines.” This worn-out proclamation is far removed from reality and goes against an overwhelming body of evidence that suggests the opposite.

In the United States alone, the imperfect Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) recorded tens of thousands of deaths and over 2 million serious adverse reactions from the Pfizer and Moderna mRNA shots. This flawed VAERS system relies heavily on the biased opinion of medical professionals who are not properly trained
or do not have enough time to understand and validate their patients’ vaccine injuries.
Because medical professionals are directly implicated in facilitating the injury, accurate reporting of vaccine injuries is something that doctors are incentivized to cover up, misdiagnose, and lie about.

This is just one of the reasons why the CDC’s own studies show that the magnitude of vaccine injuries and deaths in the population are under-reported and may represent
less than 1% of the actual injuries that occur.
Even so, VAERS has captured more vaccine injuries for the COVID jab than all other vaccines combined since the program’s inception in 1986. The safety signals are there,
but they are being ignored by some of the most powerful institutions in the world today.

Nobel Prize in Medicine becomes a COVID vaccine propaganda tool to rewrite history
Professor and senior physician, Olle Kämpe was one of the pre-selected panelists who answered questions about the “prize winning” mRNA vaccine. When asked, “Will this Nobel Prize affect the opinion of antivaxxers and the vaccine hesitant?”
Kämpe responded, “I don’t know if antivaxxers will change in anyway,
but I think giving a Nobel Prize for this covid-19 vaccine may make hesitant
people take the vaccine and be sure that it’s very efficient and safe.”

With this response, it’s clear that the Nobel Prize is being used as a tool of propaganda
to make the injurious and failed vaccine appear as a life-saving intervention. With this deceptive maneuver, the collaborators and co-conspirators behind the depopulation agenda are using the Nobel Prize as a tool of propaganda to rewrite history and re-establish some sort of authority on a very serious matter that ultimately implicates the Nuremberg Code and the very medical ethics that medical professionals swore to uphold.

For years, Moderna operated as an investment firm and failed to pass multiple mRNA therapeutics through phase one clinical trials. Some of the biggest names in pharma, from Novartis, Roche, and Merck, abandoned the field of RNA interference, over concerns about toxicity. Ironically, Weissman and three of his colleagues noted in 2018 that the trials for rabies and flu mRNA vaccines could trigger injection site and systemic reactions, inflammation, and autoimmune conditions. They wrote that the “side effects were not trivial” in a paper published in Nature Reviews Drug Discovery.
The future of lucrative mRNA vaccine platforms is at stake here, and the people behind the technology are going to do everything in their power to promote their brand of medical fraud, even after decades of failed animal experiments and after the last three years of amassing a human body count.

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Young athletes are dying from heart attack (bing.com) Courtesy Demi Washington

Feb. 9, 2023, 2:47 PM EST / Updated July 25, 2023, 1:20 PM EDT / Source: TODAY
By Maura Hohman

Young people are more likely to die of heart attacks post-COVID, study finds. But why?
A recent study found that heart attacks in people ages 25 to 44 increased by 30% compared to the expected number over the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Since COVID, more young people are dying of heart attacks. Here’s what we know (today.com) New data appears to show link between COVID and heart disease.
When Demi Washington, a basketball player at Vanderbilt University came down with COVID-19 in late 2020, her symptoms were mild, just a runny nose.

But to ensure her safe return to the court, the school required her to undergo an MRI.
The results brought Washington to tears.
Following the infection, the now college graduate had developed myocarditis — when the heart muscle becomes inflamed, which can decrease the heart’s ability to pump blood.
This condition can lead to stroke or heart attack, according to Mayo Clinic. Washington was not vaccinated against COVID-19 at the time.

“I was scared because any internal organ, you’re like, ‘Oh, my gosh, I need that to live,'” she recalled to TODAY. “I didn’t really know what was going to come of it, how long was
it going to take for it to resolve.”

Demi Washington has recovered from her myocarditis and has returned to playing basketball. Many other young people who developed heart problems after a COVID-19 infection aren’t so lucky.

Washington had to skip the rest of the 2020 to 2021 season, but ultimately she was grateful. “I think about the fact that Vanderbilt does do the MRI and a lot of other schools didn’t,” she told TODAY in a segment aired Feb. 9. “The fact that I could have played if we didn’t is hard and scary to think about.”

Washington’s doctor never told her that she was at risk of dying, but he did
stress the importance of rest and keeping her heart rate under a certain pace.
She had to wear a watch to track her activity. Even though COVID was especially new
at the time, Washington said her doctor felt confident her condition was due to the coronavirus, as he’d seen something similar to other college athletes.

Washington said she felt no symptoms or signs that her heart had become inflamed,
nor did she have a genetic predisposition. “It (just) happened to be me,” she said.
“I still don’t really know why.” Washington has since recovered and is back to playing ball. But her experience sheds light on the thousands of young adults infected with COVID-19 whose health hasn’t rebounded as successfully.

COVID-19, heart attacks and young people.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, heart attack deaths across all age groups
have become more common in the U.S., according to a September 2022 study 
by Cedars Sinai hospital in Los Angeles.

The age group hit the hardest?
 People between 25 and 44, who saw a 29.9% relative increase in heart attack deaths over the first two years of the pandemic (which means the actual number of heart attack deaths were almost 30% higher than the predicted number).
“Young people are obviously not really supposed to die of heart attack. They’re not really supposed to have heart attacks at all,” Dr. Susan Cheng, a cardiologist at Cedars Sinai and co-author of the study, told TODAY in a segment aired Feb. 9.
Adults between 45 and 64 saw a 19.6% relative increase in heart attack deaths, and those 65 and older saw a 13.7% relative increase, according to a press release from Cedars Sinai. The increase in U.S. heart attack deaths continued through the omicron surge, even though the variant is thought to cause milder illness, and spikes of heart attack deaths have aligned with the timing of COVID-19 surges in the U.S.

Los Angeles County paramedic Romeo Robles told TODAY in the Feb. 9 segment that upticks in COVID-19 would often lead to more 911 calls related to heart issues in his community. “Surprisingly, people my age … we would find them in cardiac arrest, and
it was all predicted by these waves,” he said. Cheng called the connection “more than coincidental, that is for sure.” Explaining why, she pointed out that COVID-19 can greatly impact the cardiovascular system.

“It appears to be able to increase the stickiness of the blood and increase …
the likelihood of blood clot formation,” Cheng said. “It seems to stir up inflammation in the blood vessels. It seems to also cause in some people an overwhelming stress — whether it’s related directly to the infection or situations around the infection — that can also cause a spike in blood pressure.”

The reason for the relative rise in young people in particular is unclear, but one theory, Cheng said, is that the virus’s impact on the cardiovascular system in some people may
be due to an excessive immune system response and that young people are more likely
to have stronger immune systems.

COVID-19 and heart disease For COVID-19 survivors, the risk of developing a heart condition even a year after infection, regardless of how severe symptoms were, is “substantial,” according to a February 2022 study of more than 150,000 individuals with COVID-19. The risk increases even for people who don’t have any other risk factors for heart disease.
Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, a physician-scientist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and co-author of the study, estimated that about 4% of people who have COVID-19 will develop a heart problem, such as irregular heartbeat, heart failure, inflammation or heart attacks.

“It’s a small number, but really, it’s not (if) you multiply that number by the huge
number of people in the United States and throughout the world who had COVID-19,”
he told TODAY.

One theory why this happens ties into how the body is supposed to respond to viruses — by creating inflammation, according to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
“In some people with COVID-19, however, the inflammation seems to go into overdrive,” the institute noted. “Too much inflammation may further damage the heart or disrupt the electrical signals that help it to beat properly, which can reduce its pumping ability or lead to abnormal heart rhythms … or make an existing arrhythmia worse.”
Some research is beginning to chip away at how COVID-19 impacts the heart.
February 2023 study found the inflammatory immune response to a COVID-19 infection can cause calcium to leak from the heart, potentially leading to a fatal, irregular heartbeat. The subjects in this study weren’t vaccinated, and research shows a COVID-19 infection is more likely to cause heart problems than vaccination, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute also points out that COVID-19 may affect the heart’s cells. A January 2023 study, which began before the vaccine was available, looked at the relationship between a COVID infection and the protein troponin in the blood, which is associated with heart muscle injury or heart attack.
It found that 61% of people hospitalized with COVID-19 who had high
troponin levels had heart abnormalities, such as scarring from a heart attack.
Some develop blood clots after a COVID-19 infection, sometimes in the heart,
the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute explains. The virus can attack blood vessels, causing a surge of inflammatory cells, which can trigger the release of molecules that contribute to blood clotting, TODAY.com previously reported.

What’s more, the risk of developing long COVID, including heart problems,
increases with each COVID-19 infection an individual has, Al-Aly pointed out.
As a result, Latino and Black communities, which have higher rates of reinfection, are especially at high risk for heart problems post-COVID, Cheng said.
As doctors and other researchers continue to wade through the data on COVID-19 and heart disease, the best course of action is to avoid infection as best you can, Cheng and
Al-Aly said. To do so:
Wear a mask in crowded settings and consider socializing outdoors with people outside your household. Stay up to date on your vaccinations.
Research shows that you’re 11 times more likely to develop myocarditis from COVID itself versus the vaccine, NBC News senior medical correspondent Dr. John Torres said during a TODAY segment on Feb. 9.

Take a COVID-19 test as soon as you start to develop any symptoms and stay home when you’re sick. If you’ve been infected with COVID-19, especially multiple times, Cheng also encouraged staying on top of your risk factors for heart disease, such as your blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar. Typical signs of heart attack, per the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, include:

Chest pain or discomfort, such as pressure, squeezing or fullness.
Weakness, light-headedness or fainting. A cold sweat.
Pain or discomfort in the jaw, neck or back.
Shortness of breath, either at the same time as or before chest discomfort.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, heart attack deaths were trending downward in the United States, but the pandemic appears to have reversed the progress, according to the Cedars Sinai research.

“I’d love to say we’re … coming out on the other side and we can think of COVID more like the common cold. Unfortunately, that is not the case. … That is eminently clear from all of the data,” Cheng said. “This is not even just like the flu. … This virus is still very different from any other virus we have seen in our lifetime.”

Maura Hohman
Maura Hohman is the senior health editor for TODAY.com and has been covering health and wellness news and trends since 2015, when she graduated from journalism school. Her byline has appeared on TODAY, NBC News, US News & World Report, People, Everyday Health, WhatToExpect.com, History.com and more. Her interests include women’s health, racial health disparities, mental health and COVID-19.

Sources include: 
COVID jabs form spike proteins in heart cells, causing irregular
heart contractions and full blown cardiomyopathy, researchers find (chemicalviolence.com)
Nobel Prize in Medicine awarded to two mRNA developers,
whose technology has been used to kill millions (chemicalviolence.com)
UA researchers find link between COVID deaths and snake venom (abc15.com)
Snake venom in the covid 19 vaccine – Search (bing.com)

This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author

LifesiteNews.com
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VaccineDamage.news
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VaccineDamage.news
Digital.AHRQ.gov [PDF]
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