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Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?

 
Earlwii
User ID: 5137264
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04/19/2021 10:17 PM
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Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
Research it please. Let me know if you know of anyone with a pacemaker that got COVID-19. The story was in the New York Times in 1992 about a way to keep a virus from replicating with just a low voltage low current pulse, the same as a pacemaker and passing your blood between two electrods for only 6 min cut the virus infection rate by 95%. Well what about my pacemaker? By the way it would damage the virus without hurting your red blood cells. Look it up. The Dr. who running the test was from the Albert Instine College of Medicine. It was being tested on the HIV virus back then.
Anonymous Coward
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04/19/2021 10:25 PM
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Re: Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
Research it please. Let me know if you know of anyone with a pacemaker that got COVID-19. The story was in the New York Times in 1992 about a way to keep a virus from replicating with just a low voltage low current pulse, the same as a pacemaker and passing your blood between two electrods for only 6 min cut the virus infection rate by 95%. Well what about my pacemaker? By the way it would damage the virus without hurting your red blood cells. Look it up. The Dr. who running the test was from the Albert Instine College of Medicine. It was being tested on the HIV virus back then.
 Quoting: Earlwii 5137264


Get a brian moran

epiclol
Hoseman

User ID: 75361028
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04/19/2021 10:30 PM
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Re: Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
I don't think pacemakers put a current through your body.

But it sort of sounds like Dr Clark's Zapper. Or maybe a TENS device.
Earlwii (OP)
User ID: 5137264
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04/19/2021 10:33 PM
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Re: Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
ELECTRICITY KILLS VIRUSES!
In a remarkable discovery at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, N.Y.C. in 1990, it was shown that a minute current (50 to 100 MICRO amperes) can alter outer protein layers of HIV virus in a petri dish so as to prevent its subsequent attachment to receptor sites. (SCIENCE NEWS, March 30, 1991 page 207.) It may also reverse Epstein Barr (chronic fatigue syndrome), hepatitis, and herpes B. HIV positive users of this enclosed information may expect a NEGATIVE p24 surface antigen or PCR test (no more HIV detectable in blood) after 30 days. This is reminiscent of a well-proven cure
Earlwii (OP)
User ID: 5137264
United States
04/19/2021 10:39 PM
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Re: Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
In the Fall of 1990, two medical researchers, Drs.William Lyman and Steven Kaali, working at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City made an important discovery. They found that they could inactivate the HIV virus by applying a low voltage direct current electrical potential with an extremely small current flow to AIDS infected blood in a test tube. Initially, they discovered this in the lab by inserting two platinum electrodes into a glass tube filled with HIV-1 (type 1) infected blood. They applied a direct current to the electrodes and found that a current flow in the range of 50-100 microamperes (uA) produced the most effective results. Practically all of the HIV viral particles were adversely affected while normal blood cells remained unharmed. The viral particles were not directly destroyed by the electric current, but rather the outer protein coating of the virus was affected in such a way as to prevent the virus from producing reverse transcriptase, a necessary enzyme needed by the virus to invade human cells. Reverse transcriptase allows the virus to enter a human T cell line (called CEM-SS) and commandeer the DNA reproduction machinery. After using the host cell to reproduce itself into thousands of new virii, the swollen host cell (now called syncytia or giant cell) will burst and spew the contents into the bloodstream or lymph system. This is how the virus spreads, but lacking reverse transcriptase, the HIV virus can't invade the host cell and it becomes vulnerable to destruction by the body's immune system
Earlwii (OP)
User ID: 5137264
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04/19/2021 10:57 PM
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Re: Pacemakers may possibly keep COVID-19 from replicating?
The reason I ask, I work in and around quite a few people who have had COVID-19 and two that died with it. Also my wife, daughter and grandson got sick and my wife lost her taste and smell for a few months but I have been tested 3 times in a year and come up negative and I have a Pacemaker. The device the doctors used to keep the virus from replicating used the same voltage and current as a pacemaker and they just ran the blood in-between two electrodes. Well my pacemaker has two electrodes running into my heart and the blood runs in-between and by the electrodes 24 hrs a day. I have been asking around on many sites and can't find anyone who has a pacemaker that got COVID-19. If this is the case that it can keep you from getting it, then that is a big clue in how easy it would be to protect yourself from any virus. The voltage and current is very low, so low you can't feel it. It just needs to be on both sides of a vain even on the outside of the body and in the test they did for only 6 min. After just 6 min it had destroyed 95% of the virus ability to replicate.





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