The other possible fly in the ointment IMO is that most of the parents will have received an mRNA booster, on top of their original AV injection(s).
The mRNA injections are proving to have all manner of effects on various parts of the immune system, and we have seen associated reactivation phenomena.
It’s a frustrating story since everything’s still in squishy-speak. “ Seventy-seven per cent of cases tested were positive for adenovirus.” How many cases were tested? What type of test?
If it was just an antibody test or staining then that potentially rules out vector escape since supposedly the vector is only wearing SARS-CoV-2 spike.
And if we don’t know what the background test positivity is for whatever the test is then we really can’t assume any involvement with adenovirus. It could be like saying “77% of tested cases were positive for orange juice.”
I wouldn’t rule out anything of course but I just hate how squishy the current reports are.
An unverified claim was posted a few weeks ago as below, I saved the text to my notes file.
"by AC – investmentwatchblog –
The recent and sudden rise of liver damage and hepatitis in children seems to be affecting those between the ages of 1mo – 4 years of age.
What they arent telling the public is that the majority of the cases are those under 4 years of age who are breastfed and who have been actively breastfed (within the last 12 months). The children are unvaccinated, but the breastfeeding mothers (in 100% of the cases) have been vaccinated with at least 2 doses.
The incidences of hepatitis is also hitting the 11 – 16 year old age group, with the majority of the cases in that group having been vaccinated with at least one dose.
News headlines and mainstream media titles are stating that unvaccinated children are getting hepatitis and liver damage from an unknown cause (or speculating adenoviruses as the cause) but fail to mention that actual case data shows that the WHO classifies children involved in this issue fall under the ages of 0 – 16 years of age, that the majority of cases are in the 1 month – 4 year old age group, and that 100% of the cases in that age range are being active breastfed (or have been breastfed within the last 12 months) by fully vaccinated mothers.
Point of clarification: several of the hepatitis cases testing positive for adenovirus were sequenced and identified as type 41, which is correlated with a variety of gastrointestinal symptoms.
Presumably, if there were an hybrid strain circulating it would have been notably and reportably different from the known genome of type 41.
At the present time, and with the current data available, the probability of an hybrid strain of adenovirus arising as a consequence of the viral vector inoculations seems to be low.
The other possible fly in the ointment IMO is that most of the parents will have received an mRNA booster, on top of their original AV injection(s).
The mRNA injections are proving to have all manner of effects on various parts of the immune system, and we have seen associated reactivation phenomena.
It’s a frustrating story since everything’s still in squishy-speak. “ Seventy-seven per cent of cases tested were positive for adenovirus.” How many cases were tested? What type of test?
If it was just an antibody test or staining then that potentially rules out vector escape since supposedly the vector is only wearing SARS-CoV-2 spike.
And if we don’t know what the background test positivity is for whatever the test is then we really can’t assume any involvement with adenovirus. It could be like saying “77% of tested cases were positive for orange juice.”
I wouldn’t rule out anything of course but I just hate how squishy the current reports are.
An unverified claim was posted a few weeks ago as below, I saved the text to my notes file.
"by AC – investmentwatchblog –
The recent and sudden rise of liver damage and hepatitis in children seems to be affecting those between the ages of 1mo – 4 years of age.
What they arent telling the public is that the majority of the cases are those under 4 years of age who are breastfed and who have been actively breastfed (within the last 12 months). The children are unvaccinated, but the breastfeeding mothers (in 100% of the cases) have been vaccinated with at least 2 doses.
The incidences of hepatitis is also hitting the 11 – 16 year old age group, with the majority of the cases in that group having been vaccinated with at least one dose.
www.who.int/emergencies/disease-outbreak-news/item/2022-DON376
www.gov.uk/government/news/increase-in-hepatitis-liver-inflammation-cases-in-children-under-investigation
www.who.int/emergencies/disease-outbreak-news/item/acute-hepatitis-of-unknown-aetiology—the-united-kingdom-of-great-britain-and-northern-ireland
news.sky.com/story/amp/a-3-year-old-girls-fight-for-her-life-after-contracting-hepatitis-and-the-warning-signs-to-look-for-12595733
News headlines and mainstream media titles are stating that unvaccinated children are getting hepatitis and liver damage from an unknown cause (or speculating adenoviruses as the cause) but fail to mention that actual case data shows that the WHO classifies children involved in this issue fall under the ages of 0 – 16 years of age, that the majority of cases are in the 1 month – 4 year old age group, and that 100% of the cases in that age range are being active breastfed (or have been breastfed within the last 12 months) by fully vaccinated mothers.
https://theirishsentinel.com/2022/05/01/sudden-rise-of-unvaccinated-children-with-liver-damage-were-breastfed-by-fully-vaccinated-mothers/ "
Point of clarification: several of the hepatitis cases testing positive for adenovirus were sequenced and identified as type 41, which is correlated with a variety of gastrointestinal symptoms.
Presumably, if there were an hybrid strain circulating it would have been notably and reportably different from the known genome of type 41.
At the present time, and with the current data available, the probability of an hybrid strain of adenovirus arising as a consequence of the viral vector inoculations seems to be low.
So one of the questions we should be asking is, did the parents of these children get an AV injection? Answer will be yes.