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For
COVID-19 patients, widespread reports of symptoms involving brain
dysfunction include loss of smell and memory. Russell Blaylock, MD,
warned about this when he wrote,
“By wearing a mask, the exhaled
viruses will not be able to escape and will concentrate in the nasal
passages, enter the olfactory nerves and travel into the brain.”Read Dr. Blaylock’s full article,
Face Masks Pose Serious Risks To The Healthy
Ignorant
critics and trolls lambasted Blaylock for being a “quack” and an
“idiot”. These would be the same fools who are wearing face masks day-in
and day-out, accumulating viral particles in their own masks that are
traveling into their own brain.
Wearing a mask for any extended
period of time is dangerous to your own health, period. Technocrats who
sparked these policies in the first place are creating a health disaster
far worse than a mere virus. They know this and you should too! ⁃ TN
Editor
Recently, studies have been published
suggesting a link between the SARS-CoV-2 virus, brain inflammation and
neurological dysfunction. One study involving 60 patients who recovered
from COVID-19, for example, found that 55 percent of them displayed
“structural changes” in the brain that manifested with loss of memory
and smell for three months. The study, published in
The Lancet on
Aug. 3, 2020, found evidence that the SARS-CoV virus had invaded the
olfactory epithelium—tissue within the human nasal cavity that play a
role in the ability to smell.
1 2
Video
The encyclopedia
Britannica describes the olfactory
epithelium as containing “olfactory receptor cells, which have
specialized cilia extensions.” It explains that the “cilia trap odor
molecules as they pass across the epithelial surface” and that
[i]nformation about the molecules is then transmitted from the receptors
to the olfactory bulb in the brain.”
3
Studies Link SARS-CoV-2 to Changes in Brain
According to the results of
The Lancet study,
“significant enlarged volumes [of the SARS-CoV-2 virus] were observed
in the bilateral olfactory cortices, hippocampi, insulas, left Heschl’s
gyrus, left Rolandic operculum and right cingulate gyrus”—”structures”
that make up the “central olfactory system.” However, the study was
unable to ascertain how the virus managed to infect the olfactory
epithelium.
1 The study noted:
Several
possible invasion routes of SARS-CoV-2 were raised including
hematogenous, lymphatic and neuro retrograde routes, etc., yet the exact
route was unknown.1
In another study published in the journal
Brain on
July 8, 2020, researchers at University College London (UCL) examined
43 cases of COVID-19 in which the patients suffered from a high
incidence of “acute disseminated encephalomyelitis”—severe brain
inflammation. This resulted in “temporary brain dysfunction, strokes,
nerve damage or other serious brain effects.” Nine of the patients were
diagnosed with a rare condition known as acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis (ADEM).
4 5
Dr. Michael Zandi, a consulting neurologist at UCL’s National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, said:
We’re
seeing things in the way COVID-19 affects the brain that we haven’t
seen before with other viruses. What we’ve seen with some of these ADEMm
patients, and in other patients, is you can have severe neurology, you
can be quite sick, but actually have trivial lung disease.6 7
In a report published in
The New England Journal of Medicine on
Apr. 15, 2020, a team of physicians said they observed 58 hospitalized
COVID-19 patients in Strasbourg, France and found that 84 percent of
them had neurological symptoms, including “encephalopathy, prominent
agitation and confusion, and corticospinal tract signs” and also “acute
ischemic strokes.”
8 9
Among
all these studies, none has pinpointed just how the SARS-CoV-2 virus
may have entered the brain. One possible route, though, could be the
olfactory nerve in the nose, which is considered to be the first cranial
nerve or C1. It is one of 12 cranial nerves in the head. The C1 leads
into the olfactory epithelium and itsolfactory receptors are located in
the mucosa of the nasal cavity—essentially your nose.
3 8
Olfactory Nerve: Nose a ‘Shortcut” for Viruses Entering the Brain
In
January 2015, a study titled “The olfactory nerve: a shortcut for
influenza and other viral diseases into the central nervous system” was
published in the journal
Pathology.9 That study found that…
Viral
infection of the [central nervous system] can lead to damage from
infection of nerve cells per se, from the immune response, or from a
combination of both. Clinical consequences range from nervous
dysfunction in the absence of histopathological changes to severe
meningoencephalitis and neurodegenerative disease.9
The
study listed viruses that can use the olfactory nerve as a “shortcut”
into the brain. Viruses that enter the body through the nose include
influenza A virus, herpesviruses, poliovirus, paramyxoviruses (like RSV,
measles, mumps), vesicular stomatitis virus, rabies virus,
parainfluenza virus, adenoviruses, Japanese encephalitis virus, West
Nile virus, chikungunya virus, La Crosse virus, mouse hepatitis virus
and bunyaviruses.
9
The 2015
Pathology study
obviously made no mention of SARS-CoV-2 since that virus was not known
then. But if all those other viruses can enter the brain via the nose
and olfactory nerve, then might it not be possible for SARS-CoV-2 as
well?
Neurosurgeon Russell Blaylock, MD referenced the olfactory nerve as a route into the brain in a recent article in
Technology News & Trends. Citing a 1989 study the journal
Virology titled “Spread of a neurotropic murine coronavirus into the [central nervous system] via the trigeminal and olfactory nerves,”
10 11 Dr. Blaylock wrote:
In
most instances it enters the brain by way of the olfactory nerves
(smell nerves), which connect directly with the area of the brain
dealing with recent memory and memory consolidation. By wearing a mask,
the exhaled viruses will not be able to escape and will concentrate in
the nasal passages, enter the olfactory nerves and travel into the
brain.10
Read full story here…
Source: technocracy.news
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