guess this bitch is special
>bow…
CHI NA
always moving the goalposts
different article. Looks like published around the same time
A recent population‐based study has shown that vaccinations did not increase the risk of Kawasaki disease (KD).1 In contrast,various vaccines,including those against rotavirus, hepatitis B, and influenza,have been suggested to be triggers for KD occurrence.2 We report a pediatric case of KD that occurred after simultaneous immunization with measles/rubella, varicella, and pneumococcal vaccine, suggesting that the vaccination is associated with KD.
A healthy 14‐month‐old Japanese girl without any past or family histories had a fever the day after concomitant inoculation (day 1 of illness) with initial measles/rubella (MR), initial varicella, and fourth pneumococcal vaccination. On day 2 of illness, rash/redness appeared around the previous bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG) inoculation site (Fig. 1a). On day 4 of illness, she had conjunctival congestion, rash on the trunk, oral‐mucosal inflammation, and reddening of palms with C‐reactive protein (CRP) 4.2 mg/dL and white blood cell count 18 200/μL. On day 5 of illness with persistent fever, she was diagnosed with definite KD on meeting five of the six KD criteria. Given that KD symptoms were resolving with decreasing serum CRP (3.2 mg/dL), aspirin was given on its own without i.v. immunoglobulin. Rash/redness around the BCG inoculation site was still evident, which became a crust on day 11 of illness (Fig. 1b). Echocardiography indicated neither coronary artery sequelae nor heart lesions throughout the clinical course. Antibody analysis on day 6 of illness was as follows: rubella (−), Varicella‐Zoster virus (VZV) (−), Epstein–Barr virus (−), and measles immunoglobulin (Ig)G (−)/IgM (+). Rubella, VZV, and measles seroconverted on antibody analysis 3 months after immunization. The parents of the patient provided informed consent for the publication of this report.
Kawasaki disease symptoms in this patient appeared after simultaneous inoculation with MR, varicella, and pneumococcal vaccine. We diagnosed KD based on clinical symptoms and considered that vaccinations might be associated with KD occurrence. We suggest two possibilities to explain this clinical manifestation: triggered by one of the vaccinations, possibly measles, or by a reaction to the simultaneous immunization itself.
First, KD may have been triggered by one of the vaccinations, possibly measles. Vaccination sometimes accompanies/causes “fever” or “infection‐like symptoms”; therefore, we must distinguish KD from short‐term accompanying events with vaccination. This patient had rash/redness around the BCG inoculation site. It appeared soon after vaccination and gradually became a crust, and these findings are pathognomonic for KD. Rash/redness followed by crust formation at the BCG inoculation site has been observed in 70% of KD patients aged 3–20 months.3 The presence of five of the six KD criteria and this change at the BCG inoculation site were strongly suggestive of KD. In addition, we need to consider that this patient developed measles after immunization. Six days after vaccination, her serum measles antibody titer was elevated: measles IgG (−)/IgM (+). This result, however, is consistent with the reaction caused by measles vaccination. Also, the occurrence of fever soon after vaccination may rule out the possibility of modified measles caused by live vaccination, because this always takes several days to cause fever.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6899743/
Scott Dworkin is a proud member of #TheResistance whose original Dworkin Report helped uncover the Trump-Russia affair with the Democratic Coalition and explained it to a national audience on MSNBC well before Special Counsel Mueller’s probe began.
his claim to fame has beendebunked
new normal