Add this to the growing list of the coronavirus‘ awful toll on victims: a symptom that produces a strange fizzing and buzzing sensation throughout their body. Could it be connected to 5G?
As the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic continues to rage across the globe, one thing is rapidly becoming clearer. Whatever this thing really is, whatever its true origins, it is not just deadly but it's perhaps the strangest illness we have ever seen, and getting stranger by the day. Fizzing, electric sensations, heart attacks, and a drowning sensation are only a few of the extremely unorthodox manifestations of COVID-19. So much so that it presents less like a virus and more like radiation poisoning you would get from 5G or a Directed Energy Weapon.
Now I like a good conspiracy theory as much as the next guy, at the very least they wind up being a brain teaser and helps keep your critical thinking skills sharp. Even so, I have stayed away from the
5G conspiracy theories just because it really seemed like a stretch. Then as I was reading about the new 'fizzing' symptoms this morning, it made me think of the story we did on Dr. Judy Wood, and
why she feels the Twin Towers were brought down by DEW, or
Directed Energy Weapons. If you've never read that, I assure you it will be most enlightening.
Today I bring you the 'fizzing', 'buzzing', and the 'electric sensations' that COVID-19 sufferers are reporting, and we will continue to dig deeper into this very strange finding. One thing is for sure, whatever the cause, we have gone off the script as this
New World Order melodrama unfolds. Here we are the front lines of the end times, to the fight!
Coronavirus patients report strange new symptom: ‘Fizzing’
FROM THE NY POST: The side effect, reported by patients sharing their symptoms on Twitter, is now being described as “fizzing,” and is one of the more mysterious marks of the illness. Doctors on the frontlines of treating the illness tell The Post it may be one of the last sensations patients feel as their bodies fight the disease.
But as more and more patients share the effects of the illness online, many are finding they have the strange new symptom, too. One patient,
@miafia, who felt the sensation since the first day of her symptoms, described it as “an electric feeling on my skin.”
Tarana Burke, known as the founder of the #MeToo movement, shared that her partner had the illness and had a burning feeling on his skin that was so severe, “his skin felt like it was burning. Even when he barely had a fever of 99+ we literally used aloe gel for sunburn to soothe it,” she
wrote on Twitter. “The NP later told us she had heard others say that too.”
Even infamous influencer Arielle Charnas reported some “skin sensitivity” when she first came down with the virus. Doctors say the symptom is not terribly common, but may be part of an autoimmune response that effects patients’ nervous system.
“Clearly it’s been identified, but we’re just not sure yet how widespread it is,” Dr. Daniel Griffin, chief of infectious disease at ProHealth Care Associates, tells The Post. Griffin, who estimates that he’s seen about 50 coronavirus a day since the outbreak took hold of New York, says he’s heard mention of the reaction.
READ MORE
Nearly half of severe COVID-19 cases showed neurological symptoms
FROM THE NY POST: Some coronavirus patients may suffer neurological problems such as dizziness, headaches and impaired consciousness, according to a study released Friday. The study, conducted by several researchers in Wuhan, China, examined the symptoms of 214 coronavirus patients, and found nearly half of those with severe cases had neurological issues.
About a third of all patients studied — both severe and non-severe cases — had some neurological symptoms. Thirty-six patients had dizziness, 28 had headaches and 16 suffered impaired consciousness, the study found. Seizures and ataxia, a nervous system disease that causes slurred speech and stumbling, were each found in one patient with a severe case.
Nineteen patients experience sensory impairment, such as loss of taste and smell, the study found.
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