Neurological disorder MMF found to be caused by vaccines: scientific proof
(NaturalNews) It is a little-known condition that can trigger persistent
and debilitating symptoms similar to those associated with multiple
sclerosis (MS) and fibromyalgia, but is also one that the medical
profession at large is still unwilling to acknowledge. And yet emerging
research continues to show that macrophagic myofasciitis, or MMF, is a
very real condition brought about as a direct result of vaccines that
contain aluminum adjuvants, which become lodged in muscle tissue and
lead to severe neurological damage and other problems.
First
identified in 1998, MMF is characterized by debilitating muscle and
joint pain, chronic inflammation, and incapacitating fatigue. Though
clearly distinct from both fibromyalgia and MS, which are also now
believed by many to be neurological conditions triggered by vaccines,
MMF is similar in that it appears to involve the demyelination of the
central nervous system, or the loss of the fatty layer myelin sheaths
that protect nerves.
With this loss, comes the development of
serious lesions, as well as a type of autoimmune reaction in which the
body is unable to properly transmit nerve impulses, and essentially ends
up attacking itself. The end result of this can manifest as severe pain
in muscles and joints, chronic fatigue, persistent brain "fog," and of
course lasting nervous system damage.
Numerous studies link vaccines containing aluminum to MMFThe
medical industry, if it is even willing to acknowledge the existence of
MMF -- for years, conventional medicine also tried to deny the
existence of fibromyalgia -- insists that the condition has no known
cause. But copious research, including a study published in the journal
Brain back in 2001, reveals that there is indeed a known cause of MMF, and that cause is
vaccines.
As it turns out, vaccines that contain aluminum adjuvants, which
include vaccines for hepatitis A and B, as well as the tetanus shot, are
directly linked to spurring the inflammatory lesions associated with
MMF.
"The
association between MMF and multiple sclerosis-like disorders may give
new insights into the controversial issues surrounding vaccinations and
demyelinating CNS disorders," explains the
Brain paper (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11522584).
"
ntramuscular injections of such vaccines (that contain aluminum) in
experimental animal models induce comparable but transient lesions at
the site of injection, suggesting that MMF may occur 'in a predisposed
subset of individuals with impaired ability to clear aluminum from the deltoid muscle.'"
A later study published in the [i]Ear, Nose & Throat Journal in 2007 made a similar but much more direct connection. In its opening
assessment, the study explains that the pathophysiology of MMF "has been
traced to the presence of an aluminum adjuvant used in vaccines."
According to the findings, aluminum from vaccines aggregates at the site
of injection, and as many as one-third of people that develop MMF as a
result also end up developing autoimmune disease as well. (
http://www.entjournal.com)
Health authorities deny MMF, as well as any link to vaccinesWhen presented with this damning information back in 2003, the
World Health Organization (WHO), which steers the policy decisions crafted by its many member
countries, which includes the U.S., decided to ignore it. Not only did
WHO deny any link between MMF and vaccines containing aluminum, but the
organization also denied the very existence of MMF altogether.
Meanwhile,
a steady stream of studies has continued to emerge acknowledging MMF
and its direct link to vaccines. One such study published in the journal
Medical Hypotheses in 2009 acknowledges that MMF and autoimmune
disorders in general appear directly linked to the aluminum adjuvants
found in vaccines. (
http://www.medical-hypotheses.com)
"This
case has highlighted potential dangers associated with
aluminum-containing adjuvants and we have elucidated a possible
mechanism whereby vaccination involving aluminum-containing adjuvants
could trigger the cascade of immunological events which are associated
with autoimmune conditions including chronic fatigue syndrome and
macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF)," explains the study.
For a list of common vaccines that contain aluminum adjuvants, visit:
http://www.immunizationinfo.orgSource:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/038390_vaccines_neurological_disorders_MMF.html