e ID: 113f3c May 31, 2018, 9:46 a.m. No.1598055   🗄️.is 🔗kun

DOES HILLARY/CABAL HAVE FAVISM AND NEED BLOOD TRANFUSIONS?

AND ……HE WAS MOST LIKELY PERFORMING ILLEGAL AND UNETHICAL PROCEDURES ON PERSIANS!!!

Valerie J’s dad, Dr. James Bowman was in Iran from 1955 to 1961 where he studied FAVISM, a disease which relates to the deficiency of glucose-6-dehydrogenase.

http://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/dr-james-bowman-39

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PDD) is an inborn error of metabolism that predisposes to red blood cell breakdown.[1] Most of the time, those who are affected have no symptoms.[3] Following a specific trigger, symptoms such as yellowish skin, dark urine, shortness of breath, and feeling tired may develop

It is an X-linked recessive disorder that results in defective glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme.[1] Red blood cell breakdown may be triggered by infections, certain medication, stress, or foods such as fava beans

Treatment of acute episodes may include medications for infection, stopping the offending medication, or “”blood transfusions””.

 

Two variants (G6PD A− and G6PD Mediterranean) are the most common in human populations. G6PD A− has an occurrence of 10% of Africans and African-Americans while G6PD Mediterranean is prevalent in the Middle East. The known distribution of the mutated allele is largely limited to people of Mediterranean origins (Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Armenians, Sephardi Jews and other Semitic peoples).[13] Both variants are believed to stem from a strongly protective effect against Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax malaria.[14] It is particularly frequent in the Kurdish Jewish population, wherein approximately 1 in 2 males have the condition and the same rate of females are carriers.[6] It is also common in African American, Saudi Arabian, Sardinian males, some African populations, and Asian groups

The discovery of G6PD deficiency relied heavily upon the testing of prisoner volunteers at Illinois State Penitentiary, a type of study which today is considered unethical and cannot be performed. When some prisoners were given the drug primaquine, some developed hemolytic anemia but others did not. In spite of these results, the US military administered the drug widely during the Korean War to prevent the relapsing infection caused by Plasmodium vivax hypnozoites. Numerous cases of hemolytic anemia were observed in US soldiers of North African and Mediterranean descent.[28]