A recent Italian study on the neurological effects of COVID-19 infection and vaccination has been published on the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) PubMed platform. The study, which involved nearly nine million participants, found a significant increase in the occurrence of ischaemic strokes, brain haemorrhages, TIAs and myelitis within a 28-day period after vaccination.
According to the report, the study, titled “Effects of COVID-19 disease and COVID-19 vaccinations on hospital admissions due to neurological disorders in the over 12-year-old population of Lombardy. Data from a self-controlled series analysis” revealed that the risk of several neurological disorders increased in individuals who had received the mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine.
The study found alarming increases in the occurrence of strokes, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, anxiety and cognitive impairments in vaccinated individuals. The majority of patients who were hospitalized for neurological disorders in 2021 had received at least one dose of the vaccine, the report said.
Another study by epidemiologist Dr. Nicolas Hulscher of the McCullough Foundation also suggests that COVID-19 vaccines can harm the brain and have a “devastating” impact on mental health. Hulscher attributed the neurological problems to the entry of spike proteins into the brain, which he claimed increased the risk of Alzheimer’s disease by 22%, depression by 68% and cognitive impairments by 137%.
A South Korean study published on PubMed also found that the mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine could alter human behavior, with potential changes to emotions, feelings, anxieties, stress levels, mental well-being and overall attitude in vaccinated individuals. The study, titled “Potential correlation between COVID-19 vaccination and development of Alzheimer’s disease” found a higher incidence of mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease in individuals who received the mRNA-based vaccine within three months of vaccination, compared to the unvaccinated group.