by Daniel Brouse
August 23, 2021
help@membrane.com
Q: Why are there so many breakthrough cases of COVID in the vaccinated?
A: There are several reasons why there are breakthrough cases with any vaccine; however, COVID is different. Many of the vaccinated people getting COVID already had COVID prior to being vaccinated. This is the second time they have contracted the virus.
Once you have had COVID, your immune system is compromised. You should consider yourself immune compromised. The vaccine will not fully compensate for that fact. COVID damages your immune system. The virus makes your antibodies dysfunctional. The virus suppresses your memory T cells. The virus does a lot more to thwart an immune response. So though you may have the antibodies, maybe even lots and lots of antibodies, you’ve got Nobody’s At Home Syndrome. There is little to no immune response regulation nor coordination. This is also why natural immunity through infection is impossible. COVID erases the memory from your memory cells, so to speak. It can’t even remember itself.
Q: Is this a hallmark of the virus? I mean is this finding in all post COVID cases?
A: Yes. Severity of illness does not appear to be a factor (mild cases to severe all exhibit similar compromises to the immune system.) The exception is asymptomatic cases. We still don’t know about asymptomatic cases. The evidence is pointing to all cases that progress past the nasal passage result in immunocompromised individuals. There also is a small percentage (1 in 100,000) of people that appear to evade impact.
The scientific community is looking for ways to cure the problems. So far, there is only some success in treating the symptoms. There is nothing else to really compare to long-COVID. A similar condition happens to some measles survivors that bares a slight resemblance in T cell response, but it is not same. “Measles induces immune suppression through a process called immune amnesia. Studies in non-human primates revealed that MV actually replaces the old memory cells of its host with new, MV-specific lymphocytes. As a result, the patient emerges with both a strong MV-specific immunity and an increased vulnerability to all other pathogens.” COVID appears to use a different process that involves T cell suppression. There is also some similarity to HIV. “HIV attacks a specific type of immune system cell in the body. It’s known as the CD4 helper cell or T cell. When HIV destroys this cell, it becomes harder for the body to fight off other infections.” Again, COVID appears to use a different mechanism to suppress T cells.
Q: What do we know about the immune system post-COVID?
A: We know at least two important pieces of the puzzle:
1) The SARS-CoV-2 causes gene expressions in the host that result in dysfunctional NAD+. The virus makes it harder for the body to create NAD+ and also increases the breakdown in NAD+. “NAD regulates the inflammatory response in immune and non-immune cells through Sirtuins. Epigenetic regulation of histones and non-histone proteins is induced by sirtuins and is essential for the development, reprogramming, and differentiation of the immune system and its related pathologies. A deregulation of the NAD+ levels has been associated with metabolic diseases and aging-related diseases, including neurodegeneration, defective immune responses, and cancer.” — NAD-immune-system
2) The SARS-CoV-2 causes gene expressions in the host that result in upregulation of IDO (Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase). “IDO is an immune checkpoint molecule in the sense that it is an immunomodulatory enzyme produced by alternatively activated macrophages and other immunoregulatory cells. IDO is known to suppress T and NK cells, generate Tregs and myeloid-derived suppressor cells, and also supports angiogenesis.’ (Wikipedia)
Q: How long do these gene expressions (epigenetics) last? How long does long haulers syndrome last?
A: We don’t know how long post-COVID cases will suffer with a compromised immune system. Long-COVID patients from January of 2020 are still immune compromised. It is possible the genetic changes will never revert.
COVID-19 Delta Variant and Vaccines