Alright, here is how it's supposed to work https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/how-mrna-vaccines-work
The mRNA vaccine goes into your arm. This mRNA instructs your own cells on how to build a part of a protein that the virus has. The needle will hurt like when receiving other vaccines
Your muscle cells take up this mRNA and read the instructions, building a spike protein that also is on the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) Some of the spike protein shows in part or in whole on the surface of these cells
Your immune system recognizes that the protein is different. It starts to produce antibodies as well as trains immune cells to recognize it in the future
When your body next sees SARS-CoV-2, some antibodies will be there to start protecting immediately, and immune cells will be primed to increase that protection
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So you got it mostly right I think. Unless this explanation is bogus of course.
>But here’s where the problem comes. In a virus, in a Coronavirus, that spike protein becomes part of the viral capsule. In other words, the cell wall around the virus, called the viral capsule. But it’s not in the virus. It’s in your cells. So it therefore becomes part of the cell wall of your vascular endothelium. Which means that these cells that line your blood vessels, which are supposed to be smooth so that blood flows smoothly, now have these little spikey bits sticking out. So it is absolutely inevitable that blood clots will form. Because your blood platelets circulate around in your blood vessels. And the purpose of blood platelets is to detect a damaged vessel and block that vessel to stop bleeding. So when the platelet comes through the capillary, it suddenly hits all these all these Covid spikes that are jutting into the inside of the vessel, it is absolutely inevitable that a blood clot will form to block that vessel. That’s how platelets work.
The spike also binds to ace-2 receptors though which is the primary entry point for the virus through the same action. So I believe there is no actual immunity produced and any affect of the vaccine on preventing infection is purely a prophylactic effect from free radical spikes blocking those receptors from being bound too by the virus. But this also explains why the vaccine only works for a few months if that or not at all.
>But this also explains why the vaccine only works for a few months if that or not at all.
Yeah, that's what doesn't fit with the "Your immune system recognizes that the protein is different. It starts to produce antibodies as well as trains immune cells to recognize it in the future" picture. It sounds like something's off here, the result of the "pattern recognition" training the immune system supposedly goes through shouldn't just go away after a few month
>The spike also binds to ace-2 receptors though which is the primary entry point for the virus through the same action.
That's probably the part related to the "iodine saturation" analogy I was referring to a couple of post above, that's probably where that picture in my mind comes from
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