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Human Papillomavirus Vaccine- HPV Vaccine

Vaccination with bovine, chick, yeast antigens synthesizes cross-reactive antibodies targeting human acetylcholine receptor and MuSK protein to cause Myasthenia Gravis: Confirmed by natural experiment (VAERS data), bioinformatics, case reports, animal experiments and titer study
Published: 2019
SYNOPSIS

Animal protein containing vaccines cause autoimmune diseases even when
the vaccine does not contain an adjuvant. Adjuvanted vaccines only make the problem worse.
Vaccines interact to cause autoimmune diseases.

CITATION

Arumugham, Vinu. Zenodo, 2019, September 16 http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3421559.

SUMMARY

Myasthenia Gravis (MG) is a neuromuscular junction disorder, development of which is often reported following the administration of many vaccines. Most cases occur following administration of the influenza vaccines (per the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System-VAERS), most of which are manufactured using embryonated chicken eggs and contain residual egg proteins (AchR proteins). The chick proteins are very similar to the AchR proteins in human beings, so when the antibody production is directed against the chick protein there is a cross reaction with the human AchR, causing MG.

A similar mechanism is involved in Graves’ disease (GD). Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is used to produce recombinant Hepatitis B vaccine (HBV), Human Papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) and injectable insulin products. We show significant protein sequence homology between GD autoepitopes, animal proteins and S. cerevisiae proteins. Humoral immune response directed against S. cerevisiae occurs following HBV, HPV administration and prolonged injectable insulin usage as in type 1 diabetes. Thus leading to the development of GD and numerous other autoimmune disorders.

The findings described add to the evidence that non-target antigens (NTA) in vaccines cause numerous disorders.

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Bioinformatics and epidemiological evidence link yeast protein containing HPV and Hepatitis B vaccines to numerous autoimmune disorders such as vitiligo, narcolepsy, hypothyroidism, systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis
Published: 2018
SYNOPSIS

Yeast proteins in the human papillomavirus (HPV) and hepatitis B vaccines—in combination with powerful adjuvants—can give rise to autoimmune reactions, and “non-target” proteins in other vaccines can do the same.

CITATION

Arumugham V. Bioinformatics and epidemiological evidence link yeast protein containing HPV and Hepatitis B vaccines to numerous autoimmune disorders such as vitiligo, narcolepsy, hypothyroidism, systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis. Zenodo 2018. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1435404.

SUMMARY

This bioinformatics analysis confirms that recombinant vaccines containing yeast and immune-boosting adjuvants—the human papillomavirus (HPV) and hepatitis B vaccines—can produce “off-target” autoimmune responses due to molecular mimicry between yeast proteins and human self-proteins. In fact, this failure mechanism affects all vaccines due to vaccines’ use of non-target food, animal, viral, bacterial or fungal proteins as growth media and excipients. Narcolepsy (a sleep disorder) and vitiligo (a skin disorder) are just two of the many autoimmune conditions associated with the HPV and hepatitis B vaccines.

 

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