Those long, fibrous strands embalmers are pulling out of cadavers’ blood vessels may be collagen. From Jessica Rose at jessicar.substack.com:
Let’s get some definitions out of the way:
Fibrosis is a pathological wound healing in which connective tissue replaces normal parenchymal tissue to the extent that it goes unchecked, leading to considerable tissue remodeling and the formation of permanent scar tissue.1
Connective tissue is one of the four primary types of animal tissue, along with epithelial tissue, muscle tissue, and nervous tissue.2
Collagen is the main structural protein in the extracellular matrix found in the body’s various connective tissues.3
- Type I collagen is the most abundant collagen of the human body. It forms large, eosinophilic fibers known as collagen fibers. It is present in scar tissue, the end product when tissue heals by repair, as well as tendons, ligaments, the endomysium of myofibrils, the organic part of bone, the dermis, the dentin, and organ capsules.4
- Type III collagen is one of the fibrillar collagens whose proteins have a long, inflexible, triple-helical domain. Type III collagen is found as a major structural component in hollow organs such as large blood vessels, uterus and bowel.5
A recent paper published in Science confirms what many of us have been saying for well over a year now: repeated injections with modified mRNA encapsulated by LNPs messes up your immune system.