01/09/2021 / By Arsenio Toledo
Mainstream media outlets are telling men to strongly consider freezing their sperm before receiving a Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine because it can lead to future fertility problems.
This is according to the University of Miami, which is conducting research into the new coronavirus vaccines flooding the United States to ascertain whether or not they can cause infertility and whether they have any other damaging effects.
Um, men…you might wanna read the last line of this article before you roll up your sleeves for the COVID jab! 😫https://t.co/6CU7ro7kWg pic.twitter.com/hfdIV2e6yQ
— Michelle Malkin (@michellemalkin) December 24, 2020
The study is being led by Dr. Ranjith Ramasamy, a reproductive urologist working for the University of Miami Health System and an expert in male infertility, andrology, sexual dysfunction and hypogonadism. He led an earlier study that found that the coronavirus was present in the testicles of men with COVID-19 for up to six months after the initial infection.
“We are evaluating the sperm parameters and quality before the vaccine and after the vaccine,” said Ramasamy. “From the biology of the COVID vaccine, we believe it shouldn’t affect fertility but we want to do the study to make sure that men who want to have kids in the future, to assure them it’s safe to go ahead and get the vaccine.”
While Ramasamy and his team’s initial hypothesis is that the coronavirus vaccine will not affect male fertility in any way, they want to have the data to back up their claim.
Ramasamy and his team are looking for men between the ages of 18 and 50 who are willing to go through a fertility evaluation before they receive the coronavirus vaccine.
“We want to see if there is any decrease in sperm production or quality,” said Dr. Daniel Nassau, a member of the research team and a urology fellow at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
“We will look at a semen sample before they get the vaccine, and then at three and six months thereafter.”
Study participants are being strongly urged to freeze their sperm prior to vaccination to protect their fertility. (Related: Pfizer coronavirus vaccine warning: No breastfeeding or getting pregnant after being immunized… it might damage the child.)
Mainstream media outlets have amplified Ramasamy’s call for men to freeze their sperm before taking the vaccine, including WPLG Local 10, the Miami affiliate of ABC, and WAVY-TV 10, the Portsmouth, Virginia-based local affiliate of NBC.
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Ramasamy and his team were able to discover that the virus isn’t limited to affecting the respiratory system, but can in fact also be debilitating to male fertility. Their previous study found that COVID-19 has the potential to cause male infertility and can possibly be spread sexually by asymptomatic men.
According to Dr. Robin Poe-Zeigler, the medical director of the New Hope Center for Reproductive Medicine in Virginia, research has found that the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2, or ACE2 “receptor,” a specific protein that allows the coronavirus to infect human cells, has been found in tissues around the body, including the lungs, the gastrointestinal tract, the liver and, more importantly, testicular tissue.
This means that the coronavirus can harm testicular tissue even if men with COVID-19 don’t show any symptoms. More research is being conducted to learn just how much of the virus is needed to be present in the testes before it can be detected in semen, and whether or not men can pass the coronavirus like a sexually transmitted disease.
“What they haven’t shown is [if] it actually infects the sperm cell, the actual sperm itself,” said Poe-Zeigler, who admitted that all they know for certain is that COVID-19 can infect testicular tissue. Studies have also failed to show that compromised fertility is long-lasting.
Poe-Zeigler, like mainstream media outlets, is warning men to consider freezing their sperm just in case.
“If we find there are long-lasting impacts, they will have at least one unaffected specimen that they could use for future conception efforts,” said Poe-Zeigler.
Unfortunately, Poe-Zeigler admitted that freezing the sperm isn’t a viable option for everyone because of the time and financial constraints that come with opting for artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization.
This makes the coronavirus vaccines very risky to take for men, especially those who are looking to start a family soon. Journalist Shane Trejo of alternative news website Big League Politics said that the vaccines “may end up causing worse health problems than the COVID-19 virus itself.”
“Big pharma will make out like bandits though so the truth will ultimately be swept under the rug by the globalists,” added Trejo. “The mass hysteria from the scamdemic is the perfect crisis to usher in a one-world technocracy.”
Learn more about the potentially harmful side effects that can come from receiving the coronavirus vaccine by reading the latest articles at Vaccines.news.
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Tagged Under: coronavirus, coronavirus vaccine, covid-19, fertility, fertility problems, Flu, infection, infertility, mainstream media, male infertility, men's health, pandemic, side effects, superbugs, University of Miami, vaccine wars, vaccines, virus
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