Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Study Shows mRNA Can Persist in the Body Up to 28 Days

 

Study Shows mRNA Can Persist in the Body Up to 28 Days

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Study Shows mRNA Can Persist in the Body Up to 28 Days

A new study from Denmark shows that the messenger RNA (mRNA) genetic material, which  instructs the body’s cells to make the SAR-CoV-2 spike protein, can be found in the blood as long as 28 days after vaccination with Pfizer/BioNTech’s Comirnaty or Moderna/NIAID Spikevax mRNA COVID1-9 biologics. These findings stand in direct contrast to claims by officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that mRNA stays in the blood for just a few days. The study looked at the blood of vaccinated individuals infected with chronic hepatitis C virus for up to 28 days post COVID vaccination.1

The results showed that 10 subjects out of the 108 studied had either the full or partial mRNA sequence identifiable in their blood from one to 28 days post vaccination.

Co-inventor of the mRNA technology Robert Malone, MD said that an ingredient in the mRNA shots called pseudouridine, which is used to modify the RNA, changes the stability of the RNA. Initially, U.S. government regulators had concerns about the low quantities of intact mRNA in the COVID biologics being manufactured for the public because the RNA integrity decreased from 78 percent in the lab to 55 percent in commercial batches.2 The instability of RNA is the reason why the mRNA is delivered to cells in the body encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles, a technology that has never been used to manufacture vaccines before.3 4

Researchers in the study surmise that mRNA that remained in the blood was probably inside the lipid (oil in water) nanoparticles. If mRNA was injected without being covered in a nanolipid protein, it would likely be quickly degraded by the body.5

The purpose of the mRNA is to instruct the body to make the spike protein in an attempt to offer protection from the virus. If the mRNA remains in the body for a prolonged period of time, then it follows that the spike protein could stay in the body for a prolonged period of time as well. The presence of mRNA particles remaining in the blood for prolonged periods of time, “allows pro-longed spike protein production giving an advantage for a continuous immune response in some persons.”6

Lingering Spike Protein Can Cause Heart Inflammation

According to Dr. Malone, there is concern that the lingering spike protein can lead myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) or other adverse post-vaccination reactions. The spike protein remaining in the body also has the effect of chronically boosting previous strains of the virus in the body.7

 Paul Marik, MD, a professor of pulmonology and critical care medicine, explained:

You have the spike causing inflammation, the spike causing clotting, the spike causing amyloid and prion disease, and you have the spike causing all of this autoimmune disease. It’s a total onslaught from every angle, and that’s just the beginning of what spike does. It seems the more spike you have, the more inflammation you have.8

 These findings were corroborated in a previous study. A May 2022 study looked at blood samples taken from 16 healthy participants with no previous known SARS-CoV-2 infection who had received one of the first two doses of the Comirnaty product from day one to 27 days post vaccination, along with blood samples taken from four healthy none vaccinated subjects. The study showed that mRNA was detectable in blood hours post vaccination and remained detectable at days 6 and 15 and detectable, but below the limit of quantification, at day 27.

The mRNA appeared to freely circulate in the blood encapsulated in the nano lipid protein causing researchers to speculate that the circulating mRNA particles could continue to induce spike protein expression during this time. Researchers point out that their results show that mRNA remained in the blood significantly longer than the claims of vaccine manufacturers.9 The studies conflict with the claims by public health officials that mRNA is swiftly broken down by the body.

CDC Removes Language Claiming mRNA Quickly Removed From Body

The CDC has quietly changed its position on how long mRNA stays in the body after vaccination. The page on the CDC website titled “Understanding mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines,” was updated July 15, 2022 and states:

The mRNA and the spike protein do not last long in the body… Our cells break down mRNA from these vaccines and get rid of it within a few days after vaccination. Scientists estimate that the spike protein, like other proteins our bodies create, may stay in the body up to a few weeks.10

By July 23, 2022, the CDC had removed this text from their site without changing the date the page was updated. “The CDC is quietly deleting misleading information from their website,” said U.S. Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky.


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