New Study: Pfizer Vaccine killed brain cells, contributed to death.
A new study shows that the spike proteins from the Covid vaccine contributed to the death of a 76 year old man with Parkinson’s disease, and ruled out COVID-19 as a cause.
The spike protein was present but other parts of the COVID virus were not. The autopsy showed that he had autoimmune encephalitis that caused epilepsy and probably contributed to his death from pneumonia.
If I had taken Covid vaccines in the past, and had suffered side effects, this story would be the clincher: I would not be taking any more boosters!
The question is, of course, why did this study take over eight months to get published?
MEDICAL HISTORY
The 76 year old man died three weeks after his third COVID-19 vaccination and the family requested an autopsy due to his history of side effects following COVID-19 vaccinations.
Directly after his first vaccination in May 2021 with the Astra Zeneca vaccine, he suffered cardiovascular side effects, which necessitated repeated Doctor visits. After his second vaccination in July 2021 (the Pfizer vaccine BNT162b2), he suffered behavioural and psychological changes, did not want to be touched, had increased anxiety, lethargy, and social withdrawal. And his Parkinson’s Disease symptoms got much worse, which led to severe motor impairment and the need for wheelchair support. He never fully recovered from these side effects, but for some reason still got another vaccination in December of 2021. Two weeks after the third vaccination (his second vaccination with the Pfizer BNT162b2), he suddenly collapsed while taking his dinner. He did not cough or show any signs of choking, but just fell down silently. He recovered from this more or less, but one week later, again suddenly collapsed silently while taking his meal.
They called an ambulance but after one hour of rather horrific “successful, but prolonged resuscitation attempts” he was transferred to the hospital and put in an artificial coma but died soon afterwards. The clinical diagnosis was aspiration pneumonia, but according to the family there was never any COVID-19 diagnosis, so they requested an autopsy.
AUTOIMMUNE ENCEPHALITIS
Basically, to cut a long story short, the Covid-19 Spike protein was found throughout his brain and heart, and had caused microscopic vascular damage in his brain, which caused the autoimmune encephalitis that the pathologists believe contributed to his death.
And it was the vaccine that caused this autoimmune encephalitis; they ruled out Covid as the cause of these problems, as the nucleo-capsid protein was not present; it is is a part of the Covid virus not encoded by the vaccine.
Based on the alteration pattern in the brain and heart, it appeared that the small blood vessels were especially affected, in particular, the endothelium. Endothelial dysfunction is known to be highly involved in organ dysfunction during viral infections, as it induces a pro-coagulant state, microvascular leak, and organ ischemia [19,20]. This is also the case for severe SARS-CoV-2 infections, where a systemic exposure to the virus and its spike protein elicits a strong immunological reaction in which the endothelial cells play a crucial role, leading to vascular dysfunction, immune-thrombosis, and inflammation [21]. Although there was no history of COVID-19 for this patient, immunohistochemistry for SARS-CoV-2 antigens (spike and nucleocapsid proteins) was performed. Spike protein could be indeed demonstrated in the areas of acute inflammation in the brain (particularly within the capillary endothelium) and the small blood vessels of the heart. Remarkably, however, the nucleocapsid was uniformly absent. During an infection with the virus, both proteins should be expressed and detected together. On the other hand, the gene-based COVID-19 vaccines encode only the spike protein and therefore, the presence of spike protein only (but no nucleocapsid protein) in the heart and brain of the current case can be attributed to vaccination rather than to infection. This agrees with the patient’s history, which includes three vaccine injections, the third one just 3 weeks before his death, but no positive laboratory or clinical diagnosis of the infection.
They also refer to other studies showing the presence of the Spike protein in patients with other side effects, e.g. the study of 461 people wherein 6 people got shingles after the vaccination,
While it is widely held that spike protein expression, and the ensuing cell and tissue damage will be limited to the injection site, several studies have found the vaccine mRNA and/or the spike protein encoded by it at a considerable distance from the injection site for up to three months after the injection [23,24,27–29]. Biodistribution studies in rats with the mRNA-COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2 also showed that the vaccine does not stay at the injection site but is distributed to all tissues and organs, including the brain [30]. After the worldwide roll-out of COVID-19 vaccinations in humans, spike protein has been detected in humans as well in several tissues distant from the injection site (deltoid muscle): for instance in heart muscle biopsies from myocarditis patients [28], within the skeletal muscle of a patient with myositis [23] and within the skin, where it was associated with a sudden onset of Herpes zoster lesions after mRNA-COVID-19 vaccination [29]
They note that Parkinson’s disease does not cause autoimmune encephalitis but that there are numerous reports of the COVID-19 vaccines causing autoimmune encephalitis. But what is unique about this report is that they have worked out a procedure for identifying the vaccine as the cause and ruling out COVID-19.
Numerous cases of encephalitis and encephalomyelitis have been reported in connection with the gene-based COVID-19 vaccines, with many being considered causally related to vaccination [31,38,39]. However, this is the first report to demonstrate the presence of the spike protein within the encephalitic lesions and to attribute it to vaccination rather than infection. These findings corroborate a causative role of the gene-based COVID-19 vaccines, and this diagnostic approach is relevant to potentially vaccine-induced damage to other organs as well.
THE ABSTRACT
The current report presents the case of a 76-year-old man with Parkinson’s disease (PD) who died three weeks after receiving his third COVID-19 vaccination. The patient was first vaccinated in May 2021 with the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 vector vaccine, followed by two doses of the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine in July and December 2021. The family of the deceased requested an autopsy due to ambiguous clinical signs before death. PD was confirmed by post-mortem examinations. Furthermore, signs of aspiration pneumonia and systemic arteriosclerosis were evident. However, histopathological analyses of the brain uncovered previously unsuspected findings, including acute vasculitis (predominantly lymphocytic) as well as multifocal necrotizing encephalitis of unknown etiology with pronounced inflammation including glial and lymphocytic reaction. In the heart, signs of chronic cardiomyopathy as well as mild acute lympho-histiocytic myocarditis and vasculitis were present. Although there was no history of COVID-19 for this patient, immunohistochemistry for SARS-CoV-2 antigens (spike and nucleocapsid proteins) was performed. Surprisingly, only spike protein but no nucleocapsid protein could be detected within the foci of inflammation in both the brain and the heart, particularly in the endothelial cells of small blood vessels. Since no nucleocapsid protein could be detected, the presence of spike protein must be ascribed to vaccination rather than to viral infection. The findings corroborate previous reports of encephalitis and myocarditis caused by gene-based COVID-19 vaccines.
Mörz, Michael. 2022. "A Case Report: Multifocal Necrotizing Encephalitis and Myocarditis after BNT162b2 mRNA Vaccination against COVID-19" Vaccines 10, no. 10: 1651. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10101651
It was Steve Kirsch’s blog that alerted me to this story: