CCP virus ravages the world
Studies have shown that the CCP virus (Neocoronavirus, COVID-19) can induce a variety of complications, leading to symptoms such as memory loss, severe fatigue, and even severe mental illness in some patients. Most were between the ages of 30 and 50.
Following reports from several patients with the CCP virus that their senses of smell and taste were affected, there have been sporadic reports from around the world of patients with no history of mental illness who developed mental illness after being infected with the CCP virus, including hallucinations and hallucinations, and bizarre behavior such as going out with a knife, stripping naked in front of strangers, and even adding hand rub to food.
The New York Times reported that one of the patients infected with the Chinese Communist virus, a 42-year-old physical therapist in New York State, complained of seeing images of her children being murdered, some run over by cars, others beheaded, “like the movie ‘Chasing Bill. She loved her children so much that she even had thoughts of killing them and killing herself, and was close to a breakdown. A 55-year-old woman in the UK had hallucinations, saw many monkeys and a lion, and decided that a family member was actually an outsider posing as one. Another 49-year-old man heard voices and thought he was the devil.
According to a British paper on the neurological and psychiatric complications of 153 patients hospitalized with the Chinese Communist virus, 10 of them showed “new onset psychosis,” the paper said. Another Spanish study also found 10 such patients. In the Communist virus research community, some medical professionals have also mentioned similar symptoms in infected patients in the Midwest.
Most of these CCP patients did not start with severe illness or respiratory problems, but had mild neurological symptoms such as tingling in the hands, dizziness, headache, or loss of smell. However, by 2 weeks to a few months later, such patients can develop severe psychosis, which is ten times more dangerous and frightening to those around them. Most of these patients are between the ages of 30 and 50, and it is very rare for this type of psychosis to occur in this age group.
A study released in November from the University of Oxford in England also found that 20 percent of patients with the CCP virus were diagnosed with mental illness within 90 days. The report, published in the LancetPsychiatry Journal, analyzed the electronic health records of 69 million people in the U.S., including more than 62,000 cases of the virus. Researchers say the same findings may be found if studies are conducted on people infected worldwide.
Some experts speculate that the immune response triggered by the invasion of the virus, as well as the resulting vascular problems and inflammatory symptoms, may be the cause of the CCP virus-induced mental illness. Some neurotoxins may cross the blood-brain barrier and enter the brain, causing damage. For example, in some cases, even though the immune system has destroyed the CCP virus, it is still performing the job of sweeping it away, and this continued immune activation is one of the culprits of brain fog and memory loss.
But the trouble is, from brain scans, spinal fluid analysis and other tests, no signs of brain infection can be seen, and the real cause of the mental illness has not yet been discovered. The symptoms vary, including hallucinations, hallucinations, fear, paranoia, and violent tendencies, making treatment difficult.
However, this kind of mental disorder is not unique to patients with the Chinese Communist virus; similar cases were seen in the 1918 Spanish flu and the recent SARS and MERS epidemics. Physicians admit that there are still too many unanswerable questions. The Chinese communist virus will undoubtedly be the biggest new challenge for humanity in 2021.
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