Before you read the following article, it bears repeating that researchers and doctors are making a CAUSAL connection between lone star tick bites and Alpha Gal Syndrome (AGS) meat allergy despite the fact there are people with AGS who were not bitten by the tick.
Further, journalist Jon Rappoport takes this even further by stating the very same type of causal link used for AGS is not accepted at all for ‘vaccines’ causing subsequent injuries.
Both conditions are self reported and in the following story, the patient remembers being bitten by chiggers not a tick…..
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/first-death-reported-meat-allergy-caused-tick-bite
First death reported from meat allergy caused by tick bite
A 47-year-old airline pilot from New Jersey is the first person known to have died from alpha-gal syndrome, a red meat allergy caused by a tick bite.
Researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine publicly reported the cause of death Wednesday after months of investigation. Their findings were published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.
The man’s death had previously been seen as a mystery, since medical examinations showed no evidence of a heart attack or other life-threatening issues.
According to the researchers, the man started feeling sick four hours after consuming a hamburger at a barbecue in September 2024. When he returned home, he was well enough to mow the lawn and read the paper. But shortly after 7:30 p.m. that day, the man’s son found him unconscious on the bathroom floor with vomit around him. An autopsy ruled that his death was sudden and unexplained.
Two weeks earlier, the man had become ill after eating a steak dinner on a camping trip with his wife and children. The researchers said he woke up at 2 a.m. with severe diarrhea, vomiting and stomach pain, and later told one of his sons that he thought he was going to die. However, he and his wife were uncertain of what had happened, so they decided not to consult a doctor.
“The tragedy is that they didn’t think of that episode as anaphylaxis, and therefore didn’t connect it to the beef at the time,” said Dr. Thomas Platts-Mills, an allergist at the University of Virginia School of Medicine who discovered alpha-gal syndrome and diagnosed the New Jersey man’s case.
(See link for article and newsvideo)
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**Comment**
The cause of the allergic reaction did not show up on his autopsy.
But when a family friend who was a doctor talked to the man’s wife, they wondered if it could be AGS. Another doctor who knew the family friend worked with the wife for blood testing. The highest level for anaphylaxis this doctor had ever seen on a survivor is 100. The deceased’s level was 2,000.
A few interesting points:
- According to the good doctor, food allergy deaths are really rare and happen in people with underlying asthma or ‘some other kind of medical condition.’ The good doctor didn’t mention ‘vaccines’, but since the deceased was a pilot and they were mandated to get the experimental clot shots, I’m betting he got it – and that indeed could have been his precipitating ‘medical condition,’ or the big fat elephant in the room everyone blithely ignores.
- The good doctor said a recent bite could boost AGS. The wife said the deceased had been bitten by chiggers, however, researchers now suspect the bites came from lone star tick larvae.
- The article makes sure to only push the fear narrative that it’s solely ticks, and roving deer due to climate change, completely ignoring the fact people get AGS without any tick bite whatsoever, implicating ‘vaccines,’ and the fact our own government has been working on ticks for decades and dropping them from airplanes.