It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Alicat12
Its about what they've done to our water.. sickening
a reply to: asabuvsobelow
originally posted by: Alicat12
Its about what they've done to our water.. sickening
a reply to: asabuvsobelow
originally posted by: Alicat12
Just watch it. They've literally been poisoning us with snake venom. Its all coming out. I've been waiting 2 years to finally find out what the hell is going on and I've finally come to an answer.
This is no virus. We are being poisoned.
a reply to: interupt42
originally posted by: interupt42
originally posted by: Alicat12
Its about what they've done to our water.. sickening
a reply to: asabuvsobelow
like others have said can you give a synopsis. way to many clickbait and loony videos
Researchers from the University of Arizona, in collaboration with Stony Brook University and Wake Forest University School of Medicine, analyzed blood samples from two COVID-19 patient cohorts and found that circulation of the enzyme -- secreted phospholipase A2 group IIA, or sPLA2-IIA -- may be the most important factor in predicting which patients with severe COVID-19 eventually succumb to the virus.
sPLA2-IIA, which has similarities to an active enzyme in rattlesnake venom, is found in low concentrations in healthy individuals and has long been known to play a critical role in defense against bacterial infections, destroying microbial cell membranes.
When the activated enzyme circulates at high levels, it has the capacity to "shred" the membranes of vital organs, said Floyd (Ski) Chilton, senior author on the paper and director of the UArizona Precision Nutrition and Wellness Initiative housed in the university's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
"It's a bell-shaped curve of disease resistance versus host tolerance," Chilton said. "In other words, this enzyme is trying to kill the virus, but at a certain point it is released in such high amounts that things head in a really bad direction, destroying the patient's cell membranes and thereby contributing to multiple organ failure and death."
Together with available clinically tested sPLA2-IIA inhibitors, "the study supports a new therapeutic target to reduce or even prevent COVID-19 mortality," said study co-author Maurizio Del Poeta, a SUNY distinguished professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology in the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University.
In 2018, Mexico and Thailand had the highest per capita consumption of bottled water worldwide, at 72.4 gallons of bottled water per person. Coming in second place was Italy with 50.3 billion gallons of per capita consumption in that year.
Mexico 72.4
Thailand 72.4
Italy 50.3
United States 42.3
France 38.3
Germany 38.1
Spain 37.6
Belgium-Luxembourg 35.4
United Arab Emirates 35
Indonesia 32.5