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DragonBear

04/22/21 10:55 AM

#371148 RE: dropdeadfred #371146

yes, this... it doesn't copy and paste well but I'm sure you've read it.

I see nothing all that exciting. The typical warning that anything injected in the human body (outside of saline, glucose, amino acids) can cause an anaphylactic reaction. At an extremely low frequency. And it doesn't matter if its a mRNA vaccine, or a Shingles vaccine, or any other vaccine.

Meanwhile Freddy, the probability of organ damage from Covid is much higher. Orders of magnitude. And for you, and your ilk of anti-VAXers you will have multiple chances or Covid infections to damage your organs. But what the hell, it will be fun for you and your ilk to study FACT SHEETS over and over, as you undergo dialysis in the future. Or will it be reading with a contrast MRI to check for artery/vein damage within organs. Hello Liver! BTW-Watch out for those contrast dyes! They too can cause anaphylactic reactions. You and your anti-VAXer ilk have exciting times ahead of ya! Courtesy of Covid! LOL

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fuagf

04/22/21 9:45 PM

#371229 RE: dropdeadfred #371146

dropdeadfred, re warnings re medications. When Ventolin first appeared i remember a warning on the package went something like .. 'long-term use can result in instant death.' I remember it clearly because i was at the time i was a little freaked about it.

Salbutamol, also known as albuterol and marketed as Ventolin among other brand names,[1] is a medication that opens up the medium and large airways in the lungs.[6] It is a short-acting ß2 adrenergic receptor agonist which works by causing relaxation of airway smooth muscle.[6] It is used to treat asthma, including asthma attacks, exercise-induced bronchoconstriction, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).[6] It may also be used to treat high blood potassium levels.[7] Salbutamol is usually used with an inhaler or nebulizer, but it is also available in a pill, liquid, and intravenous solution.[6][8] Onset of action of the inhaled version is typically within 15 minutes and lasts for two to six hours.[6]

Common side effects include shakiness, headache, fast heart rate, dizziness, and feeling anxious.[6] Serious side effects may include worsening bronchospasm, irregular heartbeat, and low blood potassium levels.[6] It can be used during pregnancy and breastfeeding, but safety is not entirely clear.[6][9]

Salbutamol was patented in 1966 in Britain and became commercially available in the UK in 1969.[10][11] It was approved for medical use in the United States in 1982.[6] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[12] Salbutamol is available as a generic medication.[6] In 2018, it was the seventh most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with more than 60 million prescriptions.[13][14]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salbutamol

As i child i would wake up EVERY morning after about 4 hours sleep. Then go downstairs, take part of a tablet, first 1/4 then for a time 1/2, and read a book until it worked so i could breath easily enough again to be able to go back to bed and to sleep sleep. Sometimes i was sick of staying up so one day took a full tablet and, i remember clearly, it scared the shit out of me. My heart was beating faster than i'd ever experienced before. Never did that again.

So i have been on drugs since that very early age. Who knows but that fact may have led to a psychological propensity to, as an adult, experiment with new things.

At about 26 after hearing the addictiveness debate on nicotine (i was up to 100/d for a time) versus heroin for so long, what could i do but research to learn the answer myself. Only snorted it, never shot it. After about 6 months of use heroin was very easy to stop. Unlike, for me, nicotine.

All i wanted to say was that tThe 'instant death' (instantaneous lung collapse) asthma puffers haven't killed me after some 50 years of using them.