COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines Reduce a Major Beneficial Bacteria, Gut Biodiversity: Study
Research has shown that COVID-19 mRNA vaccines reduce bacteria belonging to the Bifidobacteria genus, a common and beneficial gut bacteria. COVID vaccination is also linked to reduced gut biodiversity.
Bifidobacteria are among the first microbes to colonize a baby's gastrointestinal tract as he or she passes through the mother's birth canal. They are believed to exert positive health effects on their host.
Bifidobacteria interact with the immune system, and their presence is linked with improved immunity against pathogens and cancer.
In her research, she came across a pair of siblings enrolled in the COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials.
Microbiome has a role in most cancers and mRNA vaccines absolutely could be a cause for turbo cancer. MRNA shots as shown by @Progenabiome decreased #bifidobacteria and loss of #bifidobacteria was linked with multiple etiologies including invasive cancers. So connect the dots.… https://t.co/WBon6KJeqN pic.twitter.com/3POedTdu9E
— sabine hazan md (@SabinehazanMD) November 3, 2024
The Importance of Bifidobacteria
There are also rare cases where patients' Bifidobacteria population increases. Dr. Hazan spoke about a patient's Bifidobacteria population more than doubling a month after vaccination. However, at six to nine months postvaccination, the patient's number of Bifidobacteria had fallen to zero.
Dr. Hazan said it is unknown why some people's Bifidobacteria levels rise after vaccination.
Bifidobacteria are a common probiotic, and it is well-established that humans can consume them to improve gut health. In fact, products containing Bifidobacteria make up trillions of dollars in the market share of the probiotic market.
Loss of Other Microbes After Vaccination
Some patients may have other microbiomes missing after vaccination, and trying to track down what microbes the patient might have had before vaccination involves difficult forensics work, according to Dr. Hazan.While some vaccinated people saw an increase in certain bacteria, vaccination reduced overall microbiome diversity.
The authors also noted that the risks of common adverse reactions like fever, headaches, pain at injection sites, and so on may also be linked to the bacteria in the gut. For example, patients with high Bifidobacteria tended to be less inclined to develop vaccine adverse reactions.
A gut microbiome with low biodiversity is associated with poor health and aging. After birth, babies develop a highly diverse gut microbiome. As they age, they lose this diversity as they develop diseases, take antibiotics and drugs, eat unhealthily, sleep less, etc.
Bifidobacteria can comprise up to 95 percent of the baby's gut microbiome during infancy. This then declines and stabilizes at under 10 percent in adulthood.
Yet Dr. Hazan has seen cases of babies breastfed by vaccinated mothers possessing no Bifidobacteria. The long-term consequences of this are unknown, especially since Bifidobacteria are involved in building a person's immune system.
The increasing awareness of the importance of the gut microbiome in health has led some parents to freeze their baby's first stool for fecal transplant in the future, internal physician Dr. Yusuf Saleeby told The Epoch Times. As the baby grows and his or her microbiome depletes, the fecal sample may be transplanted to correct the gut microbiome composition.
"If the child gets sick and there's dysbiosis, the parents can go back to the company ... and reinoculate those microbes back into the baby, to try to bring back what the baby should have had," he explained.
Reposted from: https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/covid-19-mrna-vaccines-reduce-a-major-beneficial-bacteria-gut-biodiversity-research-5514534
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