Unvaxxed husband with massive blood clot, causing other issues

  • Unvaxxed husband with massive blood clot, causing other issues

    Posted by sallysreallife on April 24, 2024 at 10:56 am EDT

    This is the story, my questions are below.

    In March 2023, my husband developed an incredibly painful blood clot in his right leg from his groin to his ankle. The ultrasound tech gasped when she saw how big it was. We went to the hospital which did nothing although they did find a couple of micro-clots in his lungs.

    He has none of the “precursors” that are assumed to cause clots, and he’s never had one before.

    Apparently there is nothing to do about these. “Your body will absorb it” was the answer — to the word — that every hospital employee gave. They loaded him up with IV blood thinners for 30 hours, then sent him home with a prescription for Eliquis at $1,000/month, all the pain and swelling intact.

    At home, he started taking nattokinase and aspirin (no to Eliquis). Within 3 days the pain and swelling were gone, have not come back. In September 23 he had a second ultrasound. The clot was still there but smaller. We will go for another this month.

    Also taking lots of supplements: all the Bs, NAC, bromelain, digestive enzymes, D3, mag, K2, calcium, etc. We eat very clean, drink raw milk, I manage a farmer-to-foodie food buying club.

    In the meantime, he’s developed a few skin issues that are very disturbing. The first is in his groin where the leg meets the body inside, it has spread to his testicles. The skin will peel off in pieces, then it weeps a liquid and hurts right after the skin peels. We’ve tried all the salves (chickweed, calendula, CBD/THC, essential oils, etc). Some give relief but none have healed.

    He has a shin wound (banged on a trailer Oct 2023) that is incredibly slow to heal. The slow healing may or may not be related to the clot. But he has the same weepy redness surrounding the wound.

    He also has what appears to be eczema on his ankle, inside and out, and eczema behind his knee. Itchy, scaly, red. Again nothing heals it. The place behind his knee is now quite swollen which is concerning.

    NOTHING ON HIS LEFT LEG which is why we believe this is clot-related.

    My questions:

    1. Is the Covid clot biological? I’ve seen all the videos of the rubbery clots. Has anyone determined what they are made of? Regular blood clots are like jello and dissolve when handled. It seems like nattokinase would dissolve a regular clot after a year…

    2. Has anyone ever had these clots removed while alive?

    3. What do we do next?

    Thank you!

    Sally

    PS. I blogged about this here: https://www.sallysreallife.com/p/update-on-hals-clot

    shanks replied 3 days, 22 hours ago 3 Members · 2 Replies
  • 2 Replies
  • Mlee

    Member
    April 27, 2024 at 8:47 am EDT
    37 Activity Points
    210 Community Points

    I hope someone replies that can give you some insight. Although not vaxed did your husband suffer from Covid?

    I have written about the skin rash my elderly mother and I suffered from after guests staying at our house and I wondered about shedding causing it. Neither of have been vaxed or had Covid. My mother’s went away (stopped being itchy) after I kept applying hydrocortisone cream to her, but I chose natural remedies and it persists. I tested (privately not through Medicare in Australia) for Covid antibodies and nucleocapasid but both were negative so I don’t think it could be shedding. The fact that your husband hasn’t been vaxed, but the clot is large and rubbery which is what the embalmers are seeing the last couple of years I wonder if it is related to 5G. It (and all the satellites for Starlink etc) started rolling out everywhere around the same time as the mandates.

    This info I also found interesting – If he has venous stasis (varicose veins or if the clot is obstructing blood flow) the a rash/eczema at the ankle is common. A rash then comes up elsewhere due to this … Autoeczematisation

    Approximately 37% of patients diagnosed with stasis dermatitis develop an id reaction (Figure 1).

    The pathogenesis of AE is uncertain, but circulating T lymphocytes play a role in this reaction. Normally, T cells are activated by a release of antigens after a primary exposure to a stimulus. However, overactivation of these T cells induces autoimmune reactions such as AE.7 Activated T lymphocytes express HLA-DR and IL-2 receptor, markers elevated in the peripheral blood of patients undergoing id reactions. After treatment, the levels of activated T lymphocytes decline. An increase in the number of CD25+ T cells and a decrease in the number of suppressor T cells in the blood may occur during an id reaction.7-9 Keratinocytes produce proinflammatory cytokines, such as thymic stromal erythropoietin, IL-25, and IL-33, that activate T cells.10-12 Therefore, the most likely pathogenesis of an id reaction is that T lymphocytes are activated at the primary reaction site due to proinflammatory cytokines released by keratinocytes. These activated T cells then travel systemically via hematogenous dissemination.

    The spread of activated T lymphocytes produces an eczematous reaction at secondary locations distant to the primary site.9

    In later stages, vesicles disseminate to the legs, arms, and trunk, where they group to form papules and nummular patches in a symmetrical pattern.5,13-15 These lesions may be extremely pruritic. The pruritus may be so intense that it interrupts daily activities and disrupts the ability to fall or stay asleep.16

    Viral infections that can cause an id reaction are herpes simplex virus and molluscum contagiosum.27-29 Scabies, leishmaniasis, and pediculosis capitis are parasitic infections that may be etiologic.14,30,31 In addition, noninfectious stimuli besides stasis dermatitis that can produce id reactions

    https://www.mdedge.com/dermatology/article/245813/contact-dermatitis/autoeczematization-strange-id-reaction-skin

  • shanks

    Member
    May 4, 2024 at 6:59 pm EDT
    11 Activity Points
    70 Community Points

    Dear Sally,

    Thank you for sharing your story and I’m sorry for what you are going through! I will attach the link to the most recent webinar discussing the clotting issues we are seeing. We don’t have great answers just yet, but more information is coming out all of the time. The next step would be to find a provider who understands how to use the FLCCC protocols who can guide you through the detoxification process and bring th immure system back into balance. It sounds like you are doing a lot of great work already with diet, supplementation and lifestyle, so you may just need that last bit of help with determining spike protein load and what else you can do to help.

    A list of providers available on our website. To find that list, go to Get Started

    1. Click on <em data-renderer-mark=”true”><strong data-renderer-mark=”true”>Find a Provider.

    2. To locate a provider in the United States, check on the boxes next to <em data-renderer-mark=”true”>Prescriber and<em data-renderer-mark=”true”> Telehealth. From<em data-renderer-mark=”true”> States Served, select the desired location.

    3. To locate an international provider, check on the boxes next to <em data-renderer-mark=”true”>International, <em data-renderer-mark=”true”>Prescriber, and<em data-renderer-mark=”true”> Telehealth.

    4. In the <em data-renderer-mark=”true”>International Regions Served field, type the name of the desired country.

    5. A short tutorial video on how to navigate and search the directories: FLCCC Website 101: Provider and Pharmacy Directories – Video Tutorial

    I also recommend that you enroll in the Education on Demand series of lecturers on spike protein induced injuries. It is a series of lectures from leaders in the medical community that have researched and treated spike protein injured patients.

    I am sharing the protocols for treating Post-Vaccine and Long-Haul as well as the Weekly Updates where the doctors discuss these subjects. Please consult your medical provider for advice.

    1. <u data-renderer-mark=”true”>I-RECOVER Post-Vaccine Treatment

    2. <u data-renderer-mark=”true”>I-RECOVER Post-Vaccine Clinical Companion

    3. <u data-renderer-mark=”true”>I-RECOVER Long COVID Treatment

    4. <u data-renderer-mark=”true”>I-RECOVER LONG COVID Clinical Companion

    5. Webinar link re clotting

      https://covid19criticalcare.com/why-are-embalmers-finding-unusual-blood-clots/

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