Covid vaccine linked with risk of Mark-cysts
Constipacy theorists in our country have long known that the SARS CoV-2 virus which causes COVID-19, was lab-manufactured.
Now their research shows that the new mutation causing our recent surge in infection, was also lab-manufactured. They posit that this new variant is of foreign-origin, and was scattered here recently by some foreign heads of state and government, who during their respiratory cycles, were 'exhaling with an agenda'.
The current vaccine - which (and here constipacy theorists are in concord with the scientific community) is also lab-manufactured (but which thus renders it suspect) – is still thought by manufacturers to provide some protection against new mutations.
The global concern, however, is that some reports hint that this vaccine may raise the odds of developing a type of cyst in the body's nervous system, called mark-cyst.
Mark-cysts are nothing new and have caused tribulation and trepidation abroad in the past. But scientists here are not too worried, and say that in our local context, these are mostly benign. Past clinical observational studies in the country have shown mark-cysts to be quite inert. Some environmental factors are thought to be the reason.
A simplified explanation of some technical terms and processes is given by the scientific community, for which we need a brief detour. A cyst is a cluster of cells. Cells of the nervous system are called nerve cells or neurons, which carry electrochemical signals. Signals are transmitted between nerve cells via chemical messengers, called neurotransmitters. For the neurotransmitter to successfully transmit the message, it must activate a 'receptor' at the border of the next cell.
Some chemical structures (such as that of nicotine), mimic other essential neurotransmitters, hence are able to successfully activate those receptors, and transmit the message throughout the nervous system.
Now returning to mark-cysts in the local context: the chemicals in their cells, seen primarily as of foreign-origin, cannot successfully mimic other necessary chemicals recognised by the receptors. Hence, the message is not transmitted.
Unlike that, however, a new substance provisionally called mist, is thought by some to have potential for successfully mimicking essential neurotransmitters, for reasons outside the scope of this peer-reviewed newspaper article. The matter is explored in DoYourResearch (2015) and Don'tFeedYourConfirmationBias (2017).
Comments