For a while, I followed a certain Reddit subreddit for COVID19 positive people. I did it just to see trends without them being falsified by authorities or antivaxxers.
I saw several posts from people who had Covid, then got vaccinated, then had Covid again.
There is a large body of evidence to say that mRNA shots generally alter or destr…
For a while, I followed a certain Reddit subreddit for COVID19 positive people. I did it just to see trends without them being falsified by authorities or antivaxxers.
I saw several posts from people who had Covid, then got vaccinated, then had Covid again.
There is a large body of evidence to say that mRNA shots generally alter or destroy innate immunity, and yuor post adds valuable insights to this body.
My question has always been, will the vax add to my naturally attained immunity, or just replace it with something lesser? Hard to tell since there are so few studies. No one says, hey, let’s look at the recovereds’ antibody, B and T cell responses prior to vaxxing and then after and compare. It’s just anecdotal stories or a few studies on people getting reinfected. Very frustrating.
It's not a great paper though, and it has a very small cohort. It also seems like the timing of the sampling was not very uniform or really getting at the heart of the question. That said, the results are not promising.
For a while, I followed a certain Reddit subreddit for COVID19 positive people. I did it just to see trends without them being falsified by authorities or antivaxxers.
I saw several posts from people who had Covid, then got vaccinated, then had Covid again.
There is a large body of evidence to say that mRNA shots generally alter or destroy innate immunity, and yuor post adds valuable insights to this body.
My question has always been, will the vax add to my naturally attained immunity, or just replace it with something lesser? Hard to tell since there are so few studies. No one says, hey, let’s look at the recovereds’ antibody, B and T cell responses prior to vaxxing and then after and compare. It’s just anecdotal stories or a few studies on people getting reinfected. Very frustrating.
If we were doing real science, scientists would be conducting a broader range of studies. So disappointing.
This is the closest thing to what you are asking about, that I have seen:
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.07.12.21260227v2.full.pdf
It's not a great paper though, and it has a very small cohort. It also seems like the timing of the sampling was not very uniform or really getting at the heart of the question. That said, the results are not promising.
But nothing on nucleocapsid Ab's. Why?