"White clot syndrome, by the way, is not new. This paper was published in 1988. The treatment where people were using heparin to try and to stop normal red blood clots was generating white clots."
— Sense Receptor (@SenseReceptor) July 26, 2024
Polymer chemist Greg Harrison describes for Tony Lohnes (@sundayshopping), Richard… pic.twitter.com/Hqv9bDPhjR
"White clot syndrome, by the way, is not new. This paper was published in 1988. The treatment where people were using heparin to try and to stop normal red blood clots was generating white clots."
Polymer chemist Greg Harrison describes for Tony Lohnes (), Richard Hirschman (@r_hirschman), John OLooney (), and Deborah George how the "white clots" now being found in the bodies of COVID-"vaccinated" people are actually not new. In fact, Harrison shows that the clots were described in the peer-reviewed literature as early as 1988.
Harrison notes that when medical professionals attempted to use heparin—an anticoagulant or "blood thinner"—to tackle red-blood clots, that, in turn, led to the formation of the bizarre white clots.
OLooney notes that medical professionals were giving COVID patients heparin, to which Harrison says, "it was the wrong thing to give them."
Harrison even notes that the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein reacts with fibrinogen (a protein involved in the formation of blood clots), just as heparin does, meaning it too can cause the formation of the white clots.
"White Clot Syndrome: When Heparin Goes Haywire," Kuhar and Hill, Am J Nurs. 1991 Mar;91(3):59-60.
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