Bizarre Psychiatric Cases Among the COVID Vaccinated

Dr. Patrick William Slater is a 60-year-old neurotologist. A few years ago, he had a full-time medical practice in Austin and enjoyed hunting and fishing in the mountains during his downtime.

Then, in October 2021, Dr. Slater came down with cerebellar ataxia, a disease affecting movement. He couldn’t eat or go to the bathroom without help.

While his ataxia could be managed using drugs, it wasn’t always effective against his biggest complaint: unprecedented panic attacks.

Almost every night, Dr. Slater would experience panic attacks that left him in “abject terror.” He thought about killing himself many times, he told The Epoch Times.

No one could provide a satisfactory answer about why he had developed these symptoms. Nothing abnormal showed up on his laboratory reports, and his neurologists and psychiatrists dismissed his symptoms as anxiety.

But Dr. Slater is convinced that the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are the culprit.

Dr. Slater was suspicious when the symptoms first appeared within about two weeks of getting the second dose of the COVID shot. The second—and worse—wave of career-ending symptoms had coincided with his third shot.

After taking the booster, “there was no question in my mind,” Dr. Slater said.

Increase in Unusual Psychiatric Illness

Beginning in late 2020 with the COVID vaccine rollout, some doctors have seen an increase in unusual psychiatric illnesses.

Psychiatrist Dr. Amanda McDonald noticed a wave of psychiatric destabilization among her stable patients. They experienced flare-ups, often manifesting with worsened or new psychiatric symptoms.

“I couldn’t figure out why,” Dr. McDonald told The Epoch Times. “My patients typically stay stable.” But many stable patients were suddenly arriving at her office with insomnia, depression, and anxiety “without any sort of rhyme or reason.”

She increased some patients’ medication doses or added new drugs to their regimen, but it had little effect.

A recurring pattern Dr. McDonald sees is atypical panic attacks, which can feel like having a heart attack. Brought on with no apparent trigger, symptoms typically escalate as the evening progresses and climax at night. A typical panic attack can occur anytime throughout the day but often has triggers, and it is easy to treat if patients can avoid these triggers.

After spending over a year following her patients, Dr. McDonald realized that COVID-19 vaccines may be linked to their psychiatric illnesses.

“I already had an existing patient population when the pandemic hit that I knew very well. What I saw was manifestations in that patient population,” Dr. McDonald added.

Dr. Diane Counce, neurologist and neuroradiologist, observed an increase in severe anxiety and worsened mood.

“People also talk about how their personality has changed,” she told The Epoch Times. In cases where a family member has brought in a patient, “[The family] will say, ‘they’re just different.'”

Nurse practitioner Scott Marsland, who has treated hundreds of long-COVID and vaccine-injured patients at the Leading Edge Clinic, added that debilitating anxiety, depression, and insomnia are among the most common symptoms he has seen. However, some patients have also developed hallucinations and suicidality.

The Evidence

Unlike myocarditis, no conclusive proof exists that COVID-19 vaccinations cause psychiatric illness. A multitude of studies, however, have linked COVID-19 vaccines with psychiatric symptoms, including depression, anxiety, panic attacks, psychosis, and suicidality.

The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is a self-reporting database co-managed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), used to surveil for early warning signs of potential adverse reactions.

VAERS has documented over 9,400 and 1,600 cases of anxiety and depression, respectively, in relation to the COVID-19 vaccines. The vaccines comprise, respectively, over 60 percent and up to 50 percent of all anxiety and depression reports on VAERS.

Other less common adverse reactions include 1,500 reports of panic attacks (over 80 percent of VAERS reports), over 1,100 cases of hallucinations (over 65 percent), and 975 cases of irritability (10 percent).

Some researchers argue that the rare and fatal cases reported on VAERS may be a sign the system is being abused. In contrast, others believe they suggest a potential link to the vaccine and are worth investigating.

Psychosis

Psychosis includes both hallucinations and paranoia. Acute episodes after taking the shots have been reported in case studies.

In Brazil, a previously healthy woman in her late 30s developed refractory psychosis within 24 hours of getting the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. She was aggressive, had disorganized thoughts, and believed she was being persecuted in the hospital.

Doctors treated her with antipsychotics and mood stabilizers, but four months of hospitalization later, only her behavior had improved. Her psychosis remained.

In Taiwan, a 15-year-old boy was sent to the hospital with agitation and uncontrollable limb stretching and screaming two days after his second Pfizer shot.

He exhibited bizarre behaviors in the hospital, including sitting up and lying down frequently with mannerisms like praying in the bed. He was prescribed antipsychotics, but the behavior persisted for over a month after discharge.

Doctors then put him on a steroid regimen. Steroids are anti-inflammatory and can help calm an overactive immune system. The boy’s symptoms improved.

In India, a 17-year-old girl who received an inactive COVID-19 vaccine developed psychosis within 48 hours. She became restless and suspicious, talked to herself, and had insomnia for a month.

She had no neurological abnormalities, and all her lab tests came back normal, including a COVID-19 test. Two weeks after being given psychoactive drugs, her symptoms resolved.

Symptoms onset shortly after vaccination, exclusion of other likely causes, and absence of genetic predisposition “indicate the psychiatric adverse event may be related to the vaccine,” researchers from All India Institute of Medical Sciences and District Hospital wrote in the case report.

Cases of psychosis lasting several days, weeks, and months have also been reported in the literature.

Screenshots of reports on psychotic adverse events in a Brazilian woman (L), an Indian girl (C), and a Taiwanese boy. (Screenshots via The Epoch Times)

Suicides and Suicidality

According to React19, a nonprofit advocacy group supporting people with postvaccine symptoms, suicide is a present risk for people with vaccine injuries. However, often, it is hard to determine whether people become suicidal due to their injuries becoming too unbearable or due to a primarily physiological reaction to the vaccine.

The CDC’s review of deaths reported after Pfizer vaccines found 14 deaths among vaccinated teenagers, two of whom died by suicide, with reasons unknown.

A study on 250 dental staff in Pakistan found that nearly 12 percent reported suicidal thoughts for a few days after vaccination. Around 1 percent had thoughts of suicide every day.

Individual case studies identified a Turkish man in his late 50s with no prior mental illness who arrived at the emergency department due to an attempted suicide within three days after taking a second shot. He was irritable, insomniac, and talking to himself.

A Japanese man’s case was vividly detailed by doctors from Wakayama Medical University (pdf).

He experienced fatigue after the first booster shot and, upon his fourth shot, developed a mild headache and a floating sensation.

Four days after vaccination, however, he became highly talkative with grandiose delusions, “saying that he had won 2 billion yen in horse racing. He also presented with emotional instability, such as crying when saying ‘Everyone would be happy.'”

The neurologist he saw found no neurological disorders, such as possible encephalitis, nor signs of infection. Over a week after vaccination, he jumped from the second floor of his house and was returned to the hospital by ambulance.

Suicide cases have been rising in the United States since the pandemic. In 2020, the CDC reported up to 46,000 suicides (pdf). This number increased to over 48,000 in 2021, and in 2022, nearly 50,000 people died by suicide.

While pandemic restrictions like lockdowns and long COVID have been linked with suicides, no studies currently link increasing suicide rates with the COVID-19 vaccine.

Overlap With Cognitive Impairments

Psychiatric symptoms can also overlap with cognitive impairments like reduced memory. Dementia, for example, can manifest symptoms like depression.

Dr. McDonald treated a vaccinated patient who developed dementia-like depression. The patient, despite being in her 90s, was highly independent and lived by herself. After getting the booster, she was diagnosed with dementia and placed in a nursing home.

Taking ivermectin reversed her symptoms.

Neurologists like Dr. Suzanne Gazda, however, are concerned about untreated cases. “There are so many people that don’t even realize that they’re injured.”

Dr. Gazda has an integrative practice that treats thousands of patients with neurodegenerative diseases, and many report symptoms of cognitive decline with psychiatric symptoms.

Dr. Counce also has several vaccinated patients who developed brain atrophy. One patient had hippocampal atrophy with symptoms of memory loss and personality changes.

Dr. Counce reasoned that if the hippocampus, which serves as the brain’s memory center, atrophies, the adjacent limbic system, which processes emotions, may be similarly affected.

Possible Causes

But how exactly can vaccines lead to a person’s change of mental status and personality?

According to doctors who treat both postvaccine and post-COVID conditions, the two syndromes are quite similar in their symptoms.

Both the COVID-19 virus and the vaccines expose patients to the viral spike protein, which could cause inflammation. Depression is the disease best known for correlating with inflammation, though bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and anxiety are also linked.

mRNA technology has long been studied, and pre-2020 research clearly shows that mRNA vaccines are highly inflammatory, holistic psychiatrist Dr. Aruna Tummala told The Epoch Times.

Dr. McDonald has found that anti-inflammatory drugs and therapeutics, such as ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy, often help patients stabilize their moods.

She prescribed ivermectin for her psychiatric patients who were destabilized after taking the vaccines and saw significant improvement.

As a doctor who treated hundreds of vaccine-injured and long-COVID patients, one day, she herself developed long COVID after infection. She woke up with unexplainable negative thoughts. “I put myself in a hyperbaric machine,” she recalled, and 10 minutes after, “my mood symptoms had disappeared.”

Blood clotting, a common harm caused by spike protein, reduces the oxygenation of tissues and renders them unable to function at optimum levels, forcing them to age.

Blood clotting in the brain can cause cognitive impairments and symptoms of anxiety, depression, and psychosis as neurons become stressed and damaged.

Dr. Counce had one patient who reported anxiety, erectile dysfunction, and visual impairment. Upon taking medication for his erectile dysfunction (vasodilator drugs that increase blood volume), his visual problems improved.

Realizing that the patient had microclotting, Dr. Counce put him on aspirin and nattokinase and saw positive effects.

Spike protein can also directly harm the brain, possibly leading to a disturbance in brain activity and psychiatric problems.

It can also infiltrate immune cells, causing them to release histamine. Histamine can enter the brain and inflame and irritate the nerves.

Neuroinflammation has been linked to suicidality, and a type of anti-histamine medication has also been linked to reduced suicide.

Mr. Marsland has a postvaccine patient who only had physical symptoms. One day, the patient suddenly became suicidal.

After a painstaking conversation, Mr. Marsland figured out that the only change the patient made was switching from black tea to pu-erh tea.

“Pu-erh has incredibly high histamine content,” Mr. Marsland explained. “So he stopped drinking it, and guess what, within two days, he was back to baseline.”

Infections with certain viruses have also been linked with mental impairment. The COVID-19 virus and its spike protein have been shown to reactivate ancient viral genes in our bodies.

These genes are called human endogenous retroviruses, also known as HERVs, said Dr. Adonis Sfera, a psychiatrist at Patton State Hospital. HERVs are a family of viruses within the human genome.

Activation of HERVs is linked to psychiatric symptoms like schizophrenia.
Spike protein can also reactivate the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). EBV infections are similarly linked with psychosis.

COVID-19 vaccines have also been shown to damage the gut microbiome, possibly leading to psychiatric symptoms since many of our neurotransmitters are produced in the gut.

This is taken from a long document, read the rest here theepochtimes

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Comments (9)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    Everyone who took the vaccine is mental. You have to be in order to voluntarily take gene altering experimental mRNA treatments with absolutely zero liability or knowledge of what is in the treatment.
    The sheep who took the vax trusted their medical professionals, nurses and doctors, who did nothing to inform them. The doctors and nurses stabbed the people in the back. They took their side. Hopefully, the sheep learn the EUA laws, realize that it was violated, and sue them into oblivion. I have no empathy or compassion at all for any doctor or nurse that participated.
    The doctors and nurses were required to inform patients of known risks. The Fact Sheet for every single test given lists risks to the patient that were never relayed. Likewise, vaccines have patents, and patents have known risks. Patients were never informed of the risks found in the patents, which were publicly available for doctors and nurses to read. Giving someone a vaccine with a patent that crosses the blood brain barrier and never telling them is low, very low. These people trusted their medical professionals.

    Remember that when the nurses go on strike.

    All participants in the mess described above are mental. Hopefully, they’ve grown smarter from it, but I have little hope.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Len Winokur

    |

    “Unusual psychiatric illnesses”.
    I think believing that COVID even exists is one of them.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Saeed Qureshi

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    The experts or their opinions should not be considered scientists or science-based, respectively. These people, in particular physicians, did not study or practice science to any significant extent.

    From a scientific perspective, when the word “studies” is used, people, including experts, imply or understand it as scientific or experimental. However, critical evaluation will show that they are observational or opinion-based, like (astrology or horoscopes).

    For example, the claim of the existence of a virus and its monitoring (PCR test) is opinion-based, as there is no scientific (experimental) evidence that the virus exists and/or is used in the so-called studies.

    https://bioanalyticx.com/experts-are-doomed-made-claims-without-knowing-science/
    https://bioanalyticx.com/ask-the-experts-the-right-ones/

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Howdy

      |

      Hello Dr Qureshi.

      “critical evaluation will show that they are observational or opinion-based, like (astrology or horoscopes)”
      Astrology is ages old and based on empirical data matched across many millions of people by millions of practitioners. It is far from opinion, and though it is by need, observational, so is astronomy. As such, it is a science. As with all sciences, one has to volunteer to go down the rabbit hole to find the truth, and be truthfull with oneself, and what one finds. True astrology isn’t for the faint hearted

      It is not the comedy short stories one finds in newspapers and magazines, plus far too many videos are simply people believing they are astrologers because they learned a bit, getting on the bandwagon.

      There is no such thing as a ‘general reading’, ‘love reading’, and all the rest. Logic dictates such things will come true for somebody, somewhere, based purely on average chances. The alleged astrologer in videos even states, take what fits and forget the rest. That is not astrology by any stretch.
      This whimsical application is what has destroyed It’s usefullness, making it look petty.

      Those who look, will, with discernment, find the truth of it, and themselves.

      Reply

      • Avatar

        Saeed Qureshi

        |

        Howdy:

        Thank you for your thoughtful response to my comment. I understand and agree with your view, however, with some qualifications.

        By saying that “it is by need, observational,” you agree with me that, indeed, it is observational (implying it is not as physical science supported with control experimental exercise).

        Similarly, saying that “it is a science.” Fair enough, but it should be made clear that it is not the (physical) science people tend to assume. It is like one cannot deny the importance and validity of history. However, some promote it as a historical science, which, in my view, is an inaccurate representation of science.

        In this context, I am referring to astrology as non-science but observational, and so does the so-called medical science, because it is based on observations and opinion, not on a physical experimental basis.

        For example, there is flu caused by a virus and claimed to be scientifically “proven” established by showing pictures of laboratories with people wearing interesting costumes. Sorry, it is not science. It is an opinion without physical (scientific) evidence.

        Reply

      • Avatar

        Saeed Qureshi

        |

        Thank you for your thoughtful response to my comment. I understand and agree with your view, however, with some qualifications.

        By saying that “it is by need, observational,” you agree with me that, indeed, it is observational (implying it is not as physical science supported with control experimental exercise).

        Similarly, saying that “it is a science.” Fair enough, but it should be made clear that it is not the (physical) science people tend to assume. It is like one cannot deny the importance and validity of history. However, some promote it as a historical science, which, in my view, is an inaccurate representation of science.

        In this context, I am referring to astrology as non-science but observational, so does the so-called medical science, because it is based on observations and opinion, not on a physical experimental basis.

        For example, there is flu caused by a virus and claimed to be scientifically “proven” established by showing pictures of laboratories with people wearing interesting costumes. Sorry, it is not science. It is an opinion without physical (scientific) evidence.

        Reply

        • Avatar

          Howdy

          |

          Hello Dr Qureshi, thank you for the response.

          It is observational in the same way science is. Observation is a key skill in scientific matters, or one misses the pointers, the relevant data.

          Yes, I see what you mean regarding It as a tangible science in that way, however, it does generate reports that bear physical outcomes that I can testify, as to it’s value and use. As I said, empirical, which is something scientist use too.
          I guess we can agree to disagree on that one.

          As far as I am concerned, science stretches far beyond the traditional understanding.

          Take care.

          Reply

        • Avatar

          Howdy

          |

          My previous reply was moderated, then deleted. Not new, so I try again.

          Hello Dr Qureshi, thank you for the response.

          It is observational in the same way science is. Observation is a key skill in scientific matters, or one misses the pointers, the relevant data.

          Yes, I see what you mean regarding It as a tangible science in that way, however, it does generate reports that bear physical outcomes that I can testify, as to it’s value and use. As I said, empirical, which is something scientist use too.
          I guess we can agree to disagree on that one.

          As far as I am concerned, science stretches far beyond the traditional understanding.

          Take care.

          Reply

          • Avatar

            Saeed Qureshi

            |

            Yes, something is happening at the site. Responses are going to for moderation, which should not. That is why my above post got duplicated.

            Concerning your comment above, I do not agree with your statement or use of the words “science stretches.” This stretching has brought us the current situation, i.e., viruses, pandemics, and vaccines, by making a non-science subject into “medical science” (a fraud).

            Having said that, I agree with your statement that we can agree to disagree.
            Best regards.

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