She enumerates a range of concerns with the BioNTech vaccine, including purity; toxicity of lipid nanoparticles; dosing and long-term immune effects. There is an almost throw-away comment in there to the effect of: ”...it has also been found that when the LNPs are transported in the blood then thromboses can occur, or haemolysis – haemolysis means the sudden dissolution of erythrocytes, i.e. red blood cells, this causes hypoxia.”
I’m not in a position to evaluate any of this—the deposition is quite long, and technical (altho note that the second half of the doc is just the German version). The presentation.. somewhat twinges my “this might be crackpot” aesethetic sense (as per naming-the-nameless), but I can’t dismiss it out of hand based on that.
There is an almost throw-away comment in there to the effect of: ”...it has also been found that when the LNPs are transported in the blood then thromboses can occur, or haemolysis – haemolysis means the sudden dissolution of erythrocytes, i.e. red blood cells, this causes hypoxia.”
Googling a bit finds articles that do discuss polyethylene glycol (the LNP used in the mRNA vaccines) can sometimes have effects of thromboses):
It’s probably mainly a question of how serious that concern happens to be and the answer isn’t that it’s that problematic.
The presentation.. somewhat twinges my “this might be crackpot” aesethetic sense (as per naming-the-nameless), but I can’t dismiss it out of hand based on that.
A couple of days ago I came across this deposition to the “German Corona Extra-Parliamentary Inquiry Committee”, by Dr. Vanessa Schmidt-Kruger, who describes herself as “a cell biologist and my specialist field is the functional characterisation and elucidation of proteins”.
She enumerates a range of concerns with the BioNTech vaccine, including purity; toxicity of lipid nanoparticles; dosing and long-term immune effects. There is an almost throw-away comment in there to the effect of: ”...it has also been found that when the LNPs are transported in the blood then thromboses can occur, or haemolysis – haemolysis means the sudden dissolution of erythrocytes, i.e. red blood cells, this causes hypoxia.”
I’m not in a position to evaluate any of this—the deposition is quite long, and technical (altho note that the second half of the doc is just the German version). The presentation.. somewhat twinges my “this might be crackpot” aesethetic sense (as per naming-the-nameless), but I can’t dismiss it out of hand based on that.
Googling a bit finds articles that do discuss polyethylene glycol (the LNP used in the mRNA vaccines) can sometimes have effects of thromboses):
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0049384874900243
It’s probably mainly a question of how serious that concern happens to be and the answer isn’t that it’s that problematic.
As far as the crackpot allegation she’s well published researcher: https://www.mdc-berlin.de/research/publications?f%5B0%5D=field_authors%3A337
AstraZeneca is not a RNA based vaccine, so does not contain any LNPs as far as I know.