Advances in the fight against the coronavirus

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Obamot
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Obamot » 12/05/21, 23:50

Your lack is not at this endemic level, but your lack of ethics, that ... Image
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Janic
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Janic » 13/05/21, 08:21

by Macro »12/05/21, 22:35 PM

Janic wrote:
it is therefore the game of Russian roulette!
Ha good ... It's no more dangerous than having fun shooting yourself in the head .... So I have no fear .... The brain (well rather the mop according to your words) which is inside is not with me a vital organ ...
We realized it!
cancer is no more dangerous than shooting yourself in the head, but it is much longer and more painful while waiting for these "sweet" dreamers to find the miraculous vaccine against cancer (no luck, nothing found despite the billion invested in plums for 70 years) vaccine not subject to studies on the risks of causing cancer, genotoxicity and whatnot.
So if, instead of a mop, you had a real brain, the thing for thinking, thinking, you'd be worried, not about cancer, but about the fact that no study is required for it. subject on vaccines, and therefore you are the only one to take this risk, not the lab which is released from all responsibilities in this case!
It is also interesting and disturbing to see that the explosion of cancers, in increasingly young children, follows the explosion of vaccinations too. Causality or correlation? : Evil:
Last edited by Janic the 13 / 05 / 21, 08: 33, 1 edited once.
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"We make science with facts, like making a house with stones: but an accumulation of facts is no more a science than a pile of stones is a house" Henri Poincaré
izentrop
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by izentrop » 13/05/21, 08:31

Janic wrote:while waiting for these "sweet" dreamers to find the miraculous vaccine against cancer (no luck found anything despite the billions invested in plums for 70 years) vaccine not subject to studies on the risks of causing cancer, genotoxicity and others usual whatnot.
Bad luck for you
A Swedish survey, published in October 2020, has just provided proof that vaccination against HPV is associated with a considerably reduced risk of cervical cancer. The study focused on girls and women aged 10 and 30, between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2017. At the end of the follow-up, the analysis of the results showed that the number of cases of cervical cancer. the uterus is much smaller in women vaccinated against HPV than in unvaccinated women, especially when the vaccination took place before the age of 17. https://www.vidal.fr/medicaments/utilis ... virus.html
At the moment I meet women who would do well to undergo radiation sessions, if they had been vaccinated 40 years earlier.
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Janic
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Janic » 13/05/21, 08:49

izentrop »13 / 05 / 21, 08: 31

Janic wrote:
while waiting for these "sweet" dreamers to find the miraculous vaccine against cancers (no luck found anything despite the billions invested in plums for 70 years) vaccine not subject to studies on the risks of causing cancer, genotoxicity and others usual whatnot.

Bad luck for you
Forty women die of cervical cancer every day in Europe. Faced with this scourge, two vaccines would prevent 70% of tumors. https://www.doctissimo.fr/html/dossiers ... accins.htm
I know by heart this kind of advertisement to sell their vaccine.
However, 157.400 individuals die of cancer each year in France, that is to say 431 per day in France still, without vaccines.
Researchers predict 1,4 million deaths from all cancers combined in the EU in 2019 (787.000 in men, 621.900 in women), an increase of around 4,8% compared to the 1,35 million recorded in 2014.7 May 2019
that is 3835 per day but that, for you, it is not a plague?
I sum up: 3.835 / day; 421 / day: 40 day! Do you see the difference? And while you're there go see the victims of these vaccines up close!
Knowing that it is a virus that generates tissue degradation and that any tissue degradation can generate cancers, including vaccines! It's the dog biting its tail!
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"We make science with facts, like making a house with stones: but an accumulation of facts is no more a science than a pile of stones is a house" Henri Poincaré
Christophe
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Christophe » 15/05/21, 10:45

The assholes should resist the covid better !!


In an emergency, mammals can breathe through ... the anus


https://www.sciencesetavenir.fr/science ... ude_154238

I go out but the info is real .... sorry it's not funny ... yes anyway! Wouldn't it be diapers that kill old people from covid? : Shock: : Cheesy:

A team of Japanese scientists showed in a study released on Friday that it was possible for mammals to absorb oxygen through ... their anus.

Intrigued by the way some animals breathe through their intestines in an emergency, researchers at Tokyo Medical and Dental University have proven that the same is possible, under experimental conditions, in mice, rats and pigs. .

According to their work, published in the journal Med, this could also apply to humans in a state of respiratory distress, for example during a shortage of ventilators, as was the case during the Covid-19 pandemic, or when these machines do not prove to be suitable for a patient.

Breathing typically involves the inhalation of oxygen and the exhalation of carbon dioxide through the lungs or gills.
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Macro
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Macro » 16/05/21, 08:14

Come on .... A little oxygen suppo ... : Cheesy: relax ... it's going to be fine
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Exnihiloest
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Exnihiloest » 17/05/21, 18:40

Dropping a crate will now be a breath of fresh air for others.
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VetusLignum
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by VetusLignum » 19/05/21, 00:14

There are a lot of testimonials from India that cyproheptadine would heal patients with breathing difficulties very quickly.
No studies yet; in the meantime, a little reading on this molecule:
https://trialsitenews.com/cyproheptadin ... id-jalali/
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm ... ntagonism/
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Christophe
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by Christophe » 28/05/21, 00:52

Indian strain of coronavirus said to be just start of 'super-mutant' variant: microbiology professor warns

Professor Ravi Gupta, professor of clinical microbiology at Cambridge University, believes the virus is unpredictable and "does strange things". He warns against the Indian variant

According to Professor Ravi Gupta, professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Cambridge, there are variants of the "super-mutant", "more infectious" coronaviruses, which could appear with increasing vaccinations. According to him, the coronavirus is unpredictable. "Misplaced trust could be dangerous, because the Indian variant is just the beginning », As the Mirror relates.

Asked how to prepare for future variants, Professor Gupta explains, “I think we have good vaccines. But first, we need to keep the pressure on vaccine designers and manufacturers to adapt them. Second, the virus is going to do 'weird things'. By that I mean that faced with the various pressures that the virus is subjected to thanks to vaccines, it will adapt. And that is what we need to watch out for. "



https://www.sudinfo.be/id396136/article ... iant-super
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izentrop
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Re: Advances in the fight against the coronavirus




by izentrop » 28/05/21, 17:14

Christophe wrote:According to Professor Ravi Gupta, professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Cambridge, there are variants of the "super-mutant", "more infectious" coronaviruses, which could appear with increasing vaccinations. According to him, the coronavirus is unpredictable. "Misplaced trust could be dangerous, because the Indian variant is just the beginning », As the Mirror relates.

Asked how to prepare for future variants, Professor Gupta explains, “I think we have good vaccines. But first, we need to keep the pressure on vaccine designers and manufacturers to adapt them. Second, the virus is going to do 'weird things'. By that I mean that faced with the various pressures that the virus is subjected to thanks to vaccines, it will adapt. And that's what we need to watch out for. "[/ I]
It doesn't make sense, the virus has to circulate in order to mutate.
"Israeli data, English and Scottish data show that indeed, epidemiologically, vaccination greatly reduces the transmission" of Covid-19, assured Monday March 22 on franceinfo Professor Stéphane Paul, head of the immunology service clinic at Saint-Étienne University Hospital and member of the Covid-19 Vaccine Scientific Committee. https://www.francetvinfo.fr/sante/malad ... 43213.html
Also in January:
The main hypothesis is that the new variant evolved in a single person, infected with the Sars-CoV-2 virus for so long that the virus may have evolved into a new, more infectious form. From this human pressure cooker, a new mutation has erupted and made the world react in haste https://www.sudinfo.be/id396136/article ... iant-super
The Indian and Brazilian variants appeared in places with a high population and little respect for barrier gestures.
Last edited by izentrop the 28 / 05 / 21, 17: 34, 1 edited once.
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