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RE your MS comment: I think it is important to note that MS is an immune mediated disease, so of course any symptoms of MS will appear similar to vaccine side effects. Since you stated that your MS was caused be a tetanus vaccine, I think it is important that I give some context about MS, the tetanus vaccine and vaccines in general. 1. Getting the tetanus shot is actually associated with lower rates of MS. You can see this meta analysis in the peer reviewed journal Neurology (impact factor 8). I do however want to make it clear that this does not mean that you are lying, or even wrong about the tetanus shot “causing” your MS. Although MS has a substantial genetic component, it is typically triggered through some sort of immune/inflammatory event. Typically this is a viral infection (most often a virus that infects or stays latent inside neurons for obvious reasons), but in theory an event such as vaccination could lead to the onset of MS. What this meta analysis shows is that the even considering the extremely small chance of the tetanus vaccine in particular leading to the onset of MS, on net it actually appears to slightly lower the risk of MS (through somewhat unclear pathways, although there are a number of workable hypotheses). 2. There is no evidence for thinking that the two approved mRNA vaccines lead to increased risk of MS. At this point hundreds of millions of people have been dosed and no negative safety signal has been found. (Note that this is the kind of thing they look for, as failed vaccine candidates in the past have failed by leading to elevated rates of MS or other immune disorder). Indeed the J&J vaccine trial got paused for a bit because of this very type of concern (they just got unlucky and had 1 or 2 people out of 20,000 coincidentally develop immune disorders right around the time they were dosed, we know this was chance because now that they have given the vaccine to 100x more people they haven’t seen anything deviating from the normal MS rate). You can of course make the statement that we don’t know whether or not the vaccine might cause increased likelihood of MS farther down the line. While that statement is true, it is also true with respect to literally any condition. Maybe the vaccine leads to an increased risk of stroke when you are 85, maybe it decreases it. Based on our understanding of the biology of MS, and from experience with previous successful and failed vaccines, we can assert there is little to no likelihood that MS is likely to be caused later down the line by the vaccines. That is not to say that it is impossible! Just that the evidence for it is at the same level as we would give to any long term positive or negative effect. Sorry for the long post, let me know if something is unclear (or wrong!!) or if you want sources for something I said.

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RE your MS comment: I think it is important to note that MS is an immune mediated disease, so of course any symptoms of MS will appear similar to vaccine side effects. Since you stated that your MS was caused be a tetanus vaccine, I think it is important that I give some context about MS, the tetanus vaccine and vaccines in general. 1. Getting the tetanus shot is actually associated with lower rates of MS. You can see this meta analysis in the peer reviewed journal Neurology (impact factor 8). I do however want to make it clear that this does not mean that you are lying, or even wrong about the tetanus shot “causing” your MS. Although MS has a substantial genetic component, it is typically triggered through some sort of immune/inflammatory event. Typically this is a viral infection (most often a virus that infects or stays latent inside neurons for obvious reasons), but in theory an event such as vaccination could lead to the onset of MS. What this meta analysis shows is that the even considering the extremely small chance of the tetanus vaccine in particular leading to the onset of MS, on net it actually appears to slightly lower the risk of MS (through somewhat unclear pathways, although there are a number of workable hypotheses). 2. There is no evidence for thinking that the two approved mRNA vaccines lead to increased risk of MS. At this point hundreds of millions of people have been dosed and no negative safety signal has been found. (Note that this is the kind of thing they look for, as failed vaccine candidates in the past have failed by leading to elevated rates of MS or other immune disorder). Indeed the J&J vaccine trial got paused for a bit because of this very type of concern (they just got unlucky and had 1 or 2 people out of 20,000 coincidentally develop immune disorders right around the time they were dosed, we know this was chance because now that they have given the vaccine to 100x more people they haven’t seen anything deviating from the normal MS rate). You can of course make the statement that we don’t know whether or not the vaccine might cause increased likelihood of MS farther down the line. While that statement is true, it is also true with respect to literally any condition. Maybe the vaccine leads to an increased risk of stroke when you are 85, maybe it decreases it. Based on our understanding of the biology of MS, and from experience with previous successful and failed vaccines, we can assert there is little to no likelihood that MS is likely to be caused later down the line by the vaccines. That is not to say that it is impossible! Just that the evidence for it is at the same level as we would give to any long term positive or negative effect. Sorry for the long post, let me know if something is unclear (or wrong!!) or if you want sources for something I said.