This has to potential to reduce human female fertility rates. Wonder what the vaccines do to men’s sperm. From Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D., at childrenshealthdefense.org:
Turkish researchers said the results of their study justify “further investigations into the vaccines’ effects on human ovarian reserve.” Experts said the study’s findings have “profound” implications for global fertility rates.
COVID-19 vaccines decreased the number of primordial follicles — “the foundation of fertility” — in female rats by up to 60%, according to a peer-reviewed study published in Vaccines.
The authors said their results justify “further investigations into the vaccines’ effects on human ovarian reserve.”
“If these findings indeed apply to humans, the implications for global fertility rates are profound,” wrote epidemiologist Nic Hulscher on Substack.
He added:
“This kind of damage — to a woman’s lifelong egg supply — is biologically irreversible. The loss of primordial follicles is permanent — they do not regenerate. If this applies to humans, it means early menopause, infertility, and plummeting birth rates.”
Dr. Margaret Christensen, a trained gynecologist, clinical educator and co-founder of the Carpathia Collaborative, said the study matches outcomes she’s seen in patients at her practice.
“The impact we’ve seen on fertility and menstrual cycles from spike protein injections has been alarming,” Christensen said. “Not just inability to conceive, but marked increases in miscarriages and fetal deaths as well.”
‘The research is a damage assessment’
The study, authored by eight Turkish researchers and doctors, sought to identify the effects of mRNA and non-mRNA COVID-19 vaccines on women’s ovarian health, including their egg supply.
The researchers studied 30 female Wistar albino rats, split into mRNA, non-mRNA and control groups. The rats in the vaccine groups received two human-equivalent doses, 28 days apart. Four weeks after administration of the second dose, the rats’ ovarian tissues were harvested and analyzed.
The results showed that both the mRNA and non-mRNA COVID-19 vaccines “may detrimentally impact ovarian reserve in rats” through the loss of primordial follicles.
Primordial follicle numbers in the unvaccinated control group averaged 106.70, while the figures for the mRNA and non-mRNA vaccinated groups were 42.40 and 70.10 — decreases of 60.3% and 34.3%, respectively.