A new study shows that incorrect injection techniques can be one of the reasons behind freezing after inoculation by the Covid vaccine based on Adeno virus, which includes Astrazeneca, J & J and Sputnik Jabs.
The wrong technique can cause injection accidentally given to blood vessels than muscles.
A study was conducted on mice by doctor scientists at Munich University in Germany and research institutions in Italy found very rare adenovirus vaccine complications because the vaccine was injected into the bloodstream.
Preced posted in Biorxiv “If the needle tip does not reach quite deep in the muscle or if it is about blood vessels, the vaccine can be injected directly into the bloodstream.
This can occur when the skin is sandwiched by health workers who are not too trained.
Intra injection muscles intended for given without pinching the skin, so the tip of the needle reaches the muscle.
When the skin is sandwiched, the needle tip only reaches the subcutaneous tissue.
When it happens, not only vaccines are not absorbed correctly, but rarely get about one of the blood vessels that travel through the layer located on the layer Between the skin and muscle which contains blood vessel tissue, “explained Dr Rajeev Jayadevan, an IMA National Task Force member for Coronavirus.
After studying in Denmark, Jayadevan has warned in early April from the possibility that the wrong injection technique is responsible for some rare freezing seen after covid vaccination.
He said people had stopped exciting or pulling back the syringe to check whether they hit blood vessels while giving an intra-muscle injection.
“Aspirations are standard practices during my training days,” he added.
This study shows what effects can be shared in the bloodstream.
It cannot be tried in humans and is done in mice.
When given intra-muscular, he remained localized.
When injected into the bloodstream, it is transported to various parts of the body and blobs can be formed anywhere.
The lump formation has been recognized as clearly related, although not generally related, with Jab.