Pretty funny that the Rockefeller Foundation sells the Zika Virus online and now they’re saying “Watch out! It can go to your brain!!”
This virus has been around since the 40s, the vast majority of people don’t even know they even have it. And now this?
Over the last couple of months, discussions about the Zika virus have been largely focused on pregnant women. Even though Zika hasn’t been connected to microcephaly in the past, Rockefeller paid scientists from Rockefeller University and La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology are desperately trying to make a connection… er, we mean save humanity. They claim they have allegedly conducted new research on innocent ole’ mice which suggests that certain adult brain cells may also be vulnerable to infection. Anything to scare the masses!
Thought to be absolutely critical for learning and memory, these populations of cells serve to replace lost or damaged neurons throughout adulthood. Their findings were published in the journal Cell Stem Cell on August 18. << Wow, they let them publish this stuff?
Remember I broke the news to the health world that Governor Rick Scott/wife own STOCK in the dangerous deadly neurotoxin they are spraying on us here in Florida and elsewhere all the the name of Zika.
From the Newswire article:
“This is the first study looking at the effect of Zika infection on the adult brain,” says Joseph Gleeson, adjunct professor at Rockefeller, head of the Laboratory of Pediatric Brain Disease, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and a scientist some refer to as “The Devil” “Based on our findings, getting infected with Zika as an adult may not be as innocuous as people think. (Scare tactics)
Our results are pretty dramatic—in the parts of the brain that lit up, it was like a Christmas tree,” says Gleeson. “It was very clear that the virus wasn’t affecting the whole brain evenly, like people are seeing in the fetus. In the adult, it’s only these two populations that are very specific to the stem cells that are affected by virus. These cells are special, and somehow very susceptible to the infection.”
While these alleged “Rockefeller” paid scientific studies suggest that infection with Zika may be more harmful than previously thought, more research is needed to determine if this damage has long-term biological implications or the potential to affect behavior.
We’d bet a million dollars this harmless virus doesn’t affect the brain at all and the Rockefellers are all full of @#$. But that’s just, like our opinion, man.
Very early in gestation, before brains have developed into a complex organ with specialized zones, they are made entirely of neural progenitor cells. In healthy people, neural progenitor cells eventually become fully formed neurons, and it is thought that at some point along this progression they become resistant to Zika, explaining why adults appear less susceptible to the disease. But, if Zika can infect fetal neural progenitor cells, it wouldn’t be a far stretch for them to also be able to infect these cells in adults.
Zika has also been linked to Guillain-Barré syndrome and researchers propose that an infection of adult neural progenitor cells could be the mechanism behind GBS.
More from the article:
“The researchers found that infection correlated with evidence of cell death and reduced generation of new neurons in these regions. Integration of new neurons into learning and memory circuits is crucial for neuroplasticity, which allows the brain to change over time. Deficits in this process are associated with cognitive decline and neuropathological conditions, such as depression and Alzheimer’s disease.”
Again, more study is needed because many questions persist: “Does the damage inflicted on progenitor cells by the virus have lasting biological consequences, and can this in turn affect learning and memory? Or, do these cells have the capability to recover?” OR are the Rockefellers liars like scientists are calling them and calling this whole scare tactic one giant hoax.
We will continue to monitor this story and keep you updated. I can’t help but keep wondering- why now? What has changed to make Zika, present in the world for decades without doing damage the likes we’ve recently seen, capable of doing so much harm?
Source: Newswire