Vaccine Induced Autoimmune Response in Dogs  

Posted by Ryan in ,

   In this world of modern medicine you would believe that our bodies would be in better shape. The medical profession hides behind the guise of treating major medical problems while the truth is we are riddled with more health problems than ever before. We need to investigate the possible causes of the increase of such health problems. We need to examine the changes that the industrialized world has gone through in the last century. Some of these changes must account for the differences in the human body. One of the biggest changes besides diet and technology is the interaction with doctors and medicine. We have allowed doctors to give us numerous medicines and vaccinations without ever knowing any of the details for ourselves. Any major change made to the immune system can have rippling effects through the whole body. Here is an article I found recently examining the effects of such modern medicine in man's best friend (another mammal, like you and me):

Science of Vaccine Damage
by Catherine O'Driscoll 
A team at Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine conducted several studies (1,2) to determine if vaccines can cause changes in the immune system of dogs that might lead to life-threatening immune-mediated diseases. They obviously conducted this research because concern already existed. It was sponsored by the Haywood Foundation which itself was looking for evidence that such changes in the human immune system might also be vaccine induced. It found the evidence.
The vaccinated, but not the non-vaccinated, dogs in the Purdue studies developed autoantibodies to many of their own biochemicals, including fibronectin, laminin, DNA, albumin, cytochrome C, cardiolipin and collagen.
This means that the vaccinated dogs -- ”but not the non-vaccinated dogs”-- were attacking their own fibronectin, which is involved in tissue repair, cell multiplication and growth, and differentiation between tissues and organs in a living organism.
The vaccinated Purdue dogs also developed autoantibodies to laminin, which is involved in many cellular activities including the adhesion, spreading, differentiation, proliferation and movement of cells. Vaccines thus appear to be capable of removing the natural intelligence of cells.
Autoantibodies to cardiolipin are frequently found in patients with the serious disease systemic lupus erythematosus and also in individuals with other autoimmune diseases. The presence of elevated anti-cardiolipin antibodies is significantly associated with clots within the heart or blood vessels, in poor blood clotting, haemorrhage, bleeding into the skin, foetal loss and neurological conditions.
The Purdue studies also found that vaccinated dogs were developing autoantibodies to their own collagen. About one quarter of all the protein in the body is collagen. Collagen provides structure to our bodies, protecting and supporting the softer tissues and connecting them with the skeleton. It is no wonder that Canine Health Concern's 1997 study of 4,000 dogs showed a high number of dogs developing mobility problems shortly after they were vaccinated (noted in my 1997 book, What Vets Don't Tell You About Vaccines). 

This entry was posted on Wednesday, August 31 at Wednesday, August 31, 2011 and is filed under , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the comments feed .

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