Man’s skin ‘peeled off’ in rare reaction to J&J COVID vaccine

Image: WRIC

A Virginia man suffered a rare reaction to a COVID-19 vaccine that caused a painful rash to spread across his entire body and skin to peel off, doctors said.

Richard Terrell, 74, of Goochland began suffering strange symptoms four days after receiving the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, news station WRIC reported.

I began to feel a little discomfort in my armpit and then a few days later I began to get an itchy rash, and then after that I began to swell and my skin turned red,” Terrell told the outlet.

But soon the rash covered his entire body, Terrell said.

It all just happened so fast. My skin peeled off,” Terrell told the outlet. “It was stinging, burning and itching. Whenever I bent my arms or legs, like the inside of my knee, it was very painful where the skin was swollen and was rubbing against itself,” he continued.

Image: Dr. Fnu Nutan/VCU Health

He went to the emergency room at the hospital, where doctors determined that he had experienced an adverse reaction to the vaccine, WRIC reported.

We ruled out all the viral infections, we ruled out COVID-19 itself, we made sure that his kidneys and liver was okay, and finally we came to the conclusion that it was the vaccine that he had received that was the cause,” Dr. Fnu Nutan told the outlet.

She said that the medical episode could have been life-threatening if left untreated.

Skin is the largest organ in the body, and when it gets inflamed like his was, you can lose a lot of fluids and electrolytes,” Nutan told the outlet.

Still, Nutan emphasized that such reactions are extremely rare.

If you look at the risk for adverse reaction for the vaccine it’s really, really low,” she said. “We haven’t seen a great concern at all. I am a big proponent of the vaccine.”

See more here: nypost.com

Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Expose The Lies About COVID19

PRINCIPIA SCIENTIFIC INTERNATIONAL, legally registered in the UK as a company incorporated for charitable purposes. Head Office: 27 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AX. 

Trackback from your site.

Comments (2)

  • Avatar

    Charles Higley

    |

    Hey, no problem, that body rash and widespread blisters show that the vaccine is working. NOT!

    Clearly, the adenovirus, which was supposed to be inactive, is active in the man’s body. This is patently wrong and show the weakness of this system.

    This kind of experimental medical device has been tested three times in Africa, once for Ebola and twice for HIV. Mostly, the had no effect or tended to make subjects become sick more easily and become sicker than normal, of not die.

    However, in one HIV trial with an mRNA HIV “vaccine,” the subjects came down with body rashes and blisters. At the end of two months of this condition, the researchers’ time was up and they went home. “Good luck!”

    This means to me, because I used to teach molecular biology, that the adenovirus used to make the “vaccine” mRNA delivery or DNA delivery system contained enough other genetic material for some of the virus to be active and replicate in the subject’s body.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Artelia

    |

    How have the Sputnik V vaccines been doing? They used adenovirus in the first plus a different adenovirus in the 2nd. This has been researched for many years with regard to Ebola and Mers so the Russians just finished working on already proven, relatively new but not entirely experimental vaccines. The elderly, frail and those with severe pre-existing problems were not thought to be suitable for Sputnik V. Journalist for Russia took it as did medics but it was never compulsory and there is not mention of vaccination passports. I would think there are vaccination certificates for those going abroad.

    Reply

Leave a comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Share via