Alarming Case of Deadly Brain Disease Linked to Covid-19?
Another good reason to get another booster, they say...
“Alarming case of deadly brain disease linked to Covid-19” (Independent, 2023.09.29):
The case shares the details of what happened to a 62-year-old man who was admitted to a hospital in New York, Mount Sinai Queens Hospital Center, after having difficulty walking and showing signs of rapidly progressive dementia.
“Clinically, he experienced worsening neurological function after having been COVID-19 positive on admission,” the paper states.
Eventually, he was diagnosed with prion disease, and his case has prompted questions about whether Covid could have triggered the illness.
The authors of the new report say the circumstances provide evidence of a “potential correlation” between Covid and neurodegenerative conditions.
As there could be a direct link between Covid jabs and neurodegenerative conditions. So, what was the man’s jabbination status? The case report itself is mum on the subject, except to say:
CONCLUSIONS: Our case demonstrates the potential correlation of COVID with neurodegenerative conditions, especially prion disorders. While such cases are highly likely to be due to COVID-19, there is no definite evidence beyond coincidental findings. Future studies might be required to establish this correlation.
Hence I conclude that the man was definitely multi-jabbed. Otherwise it would have been all over the report: “An unvaccinated man catches a prion disease after being diagnosed Covid-positive!!!” Or, “A man not up-to-date on his boosters catches Covid and dies of a prion disease!!!”
As this did not happed, the man had been most definitely jabbed 💉💉💉💉all over. “Elementary, my dear Watson!” As well, it was NY city environs - the JabbiNation capital of the world.
Back to that Independent’s article:
Complications from Covid-19 infection—both those we already know about, such as long Covid, and those that have yet to be established—are one more reason to stay up to date on your Covid vaccines, experts say.
Updated Covid vaccines are now available nationwide, and they can help people six months and older stay safe this cold and flu vaccines. The shots can protect everyone eligible from hospitalisation and other bad outcomes, according to health authorities like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Have you made your appointment yet? Why not?
Meanwhile in Halifax this morning, old loons lining up to get more protection bestowed on them by $cience:
I've been bombarded with health(sick)care providers' (VA & Tricare) emails to come on in and get that "safe(ly) and effective(ly)" kill you shot. 4 in 1 actually. Covid, flu, RSV, and shingles. I've said no thanks to all from the beginning and will continue to do so. I won't touch Doritos or Twinkies, so why would I let someone inject me with these poisons? My body, my choice.
Relatedly:
"Richard Pottorff's wife came down with CJD, a fatal prion disease, a week after getting the shot"
by Steve Kirsch, October 22, 2022
https://rumble.com/v1pvgao-richard-pottorffs-wife-came-down-with-cjd-a-fatal-prion-disease-a-week-afte.html
Steve Kirsch, founder of the Vaccine Safety Foundation, interviews Richard Pottorff and Ginger Bitner, the husband and the mother of 58 year-old Tammy Pottorff who within a week after her second covid jab came down with Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), an incurable prion disease.
TRANSCRIPT - TWO BRIEF EXCERPTS
[FIRST EXCERPT]
3:15
STEVE KIRSCH: These [prion] diseases don't happen by chance. So when they do happen, and they're happening in a short amount of time after people get these vaccines. And there are dozens and dozens and dozens of people who are getting these prion diseases within a short amount of time of the vaccine. And that is statistically impossible if the vaccine didn't cause it.
3:49
[END OF FIRST EXCERPT]
[SECOND EXCERPT]
4:56
RICHARD POTTORFF: She was very active. She was very good with numbers. And very good speaking. She had a better sense of direction than I did, I have. And very musically inclined. And she never met anybody she didn't want to talk to.
GINGER BITNER: She was always very active, vivacious, friendly, outgoing. Enjoying life.
STEVE KIRCH: Just to clarify, you're her mother.
GINGER BITNER: Yes I am.
STEVE KIRSCH: So she didn't have any kind of brain abnormalities or anything at all. Perfectly healthy.
GINGER BITNER: Absolutely not.
STEVE KIRSCH: And so when did she start exhibiting symptoms that would be consistent with a prion disease?
GINGER BITNER: Well it took six days for the swelling to go down in her arm and her fingers. And it was underneath her arm as well down her left side. And once that swelling went down— and it was very, very hot the whole time. Unbelievable.
STEVE KIRSCH: Hot. As in to touch.
GINGER BITNER: Yeah. Oh yeah. You didn't have to touch it, you could have your hand four inches away from her and I could feel the heat and she had a knot there also when she came back to the car after she got her second vaccination.
STEVE KIRSCH: Did you go to the doctors and say, hey, what's going on here? I think, you know, we're having a severe reaction.
GINGER BITNER: Well first of all she went back into the CVS store where she got her second vaccination. And her first vaccination. And they said, that's normal. I mean, that can be normal for some people, is the wording. And it'll dissipate. It'll go down. It'll take a little time. So she came to the car and of course we drove on home. It took six days for that swelling to go down, putting ice on it, and so forth. And the very next morning after the swelling went down she woke up and she was shuffling her feet like she, just shuffling. She could not walk normal and she was having difficulty finding her words, to talk to us.
STEVE KIRSCH: OK. So basically she is now suffering from a prion disease six days after she got the vaccine. And perfectly healthy, nothing like this before.
GINGER BITNER: That's correct.
RICHARD POTTORFF: That's right.
STEVE KIRSCH: And it's unmistakable. So you must have gone to, talked to lots of doctors about this in the six, it took you six months before they were able to schedule a spinal tap in order to do the assessment to definitively say that she has CJD, right?
GINGER BITNER: Well it took five months to even get her into Stanford. We tried to get her into Stanford, UCLA, UC San Francisco, and they couldn't see her for six months. And they told us, my gosh, that's terrible, they said,because we've had a very big increase in neurological problems where people need to come here.
STEVE KIRSCH: Wow.
GINGER BITNER: And that's why they're backed up.
STEVE KIRSCH: Wow that's strange. A sudden, a huge increase in neurological problems.
GINGER BITNER: Yeah. And the receptionist on the phone told me that. No doctor ever admitted that or said it.
STEVE KIRSCH: I wonder what could be causing that.
GINGER BITNER: Imagine.
STEVE KIRSCH: Can't figure it out.
RICHARD POTTORFF: [laughs] There's no telling.
STEVE KIRSCH: Yeah. Yeah. So they wouldn't, they didn't, like, when you asked them, hey, why is it so hard? Eh, we've just had a rash and we have no clue what's causing all these but we're just, like, in demand all of a sudden.
GINGER BITNER: That's right. This is the receptionist saying this, not a doctor. A doctor never, every doctor I took her to, and I took her to several, they all [shakes her head]. They wouldn't even consider a connection with the vaccination. At all.
STEVE KIRSCH: Oh! You mean that safe and effective vaccine that she took.
GINGER BITNER: Oh yes. In fact the first neurologist she went to indicated it was all in her mind. The second one I took her to, that was in charge of the whole division here in Palo Alto, said, stress.
STEVE KIRSCH: Stress!
GINGER BITNER: Stress can cause these things.
STEVE KIRSCH: Ah, stress.
GINGER BITNER: Right. Hmmm.
STEVE KIRSCH: There you go. So it wasn't until six months later that they actually did the test to find out whether she's got it or not.
GINGER BITNER: That's right.
STEVE KIRSCH: And then they even tried to bury that, right? That it wasn't in the hospital record?
RICHARD POTTORFF: It was but [inaudible] the records.
STEVE KIRSCH: You asked for the records and that wasn't included in the records.
RICHARD POTTORFF: That's right.
STEVE KIRCH: The most important thing wasn't included in the records. How about that.
GINGER BITNER: Hmmm. Imagine. How could that happen.
STEVE KIRSCH: How could that have happened?
GINGER BITNER: Hmmm.
STEVE KIRSCH: Did they have an excuse for why they put everything except for the definitive diagnosis of CJD in the—?
RICHARD POTTORFF: Well they haven't returned our phone calls.
STEVE KIRSCH: So you don't know.
RICHARD POTTORFF: That's right.
GINGER BITNER: No we don't.
10:41
[END OF EXCERPT]