A Disruptive Perspective on Type 2 Diabetes
Bolus Theory brings clarity and hope to patients suffering from insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes.
Some of you might remember the story of two teenage boys who died of an epinephrine/adrenaline overdose 3 and 4 days after the COVID vaccines. The two boys had contraction bands on their hearts, indicative of an epinephrine overdose, most likely due to a breach of their blood-adrenal gland barrier…A bolus of vaccine particles can cause hormones to be uncontrollably released when the blood-tissue barrier physically disappears after T-cells attack the cells contaminated by the vaccine.
But epinephrine isn’t the only hormone that can be over-released by a damaged blood-tissue barrier. All hormones can be subject to these two distinct issues of:
hypo-secretion tied to necrosis of endocrine tissue,
hyper-secretion tied to micro-perforation of the capillaries,
notably insulin, the hormone regulating blood sugar levels.
In “The Needle’s Secret” a chapter explicitly addresses endocrine disorders, both under-secretion (caused by gland necrosis) and over-secretion (caused by leaky blood-tissue barriers in the endocrine gland capillaries), but I haven’t written much about hormonal disorders on Substack. I needed to correct that mistake, as too many suffer from endocrine disorders.
I recently had a conversation with a young, bright, highly educated doctor, and I can’t believe how far the medical community still is from understanding modern-day illnesses. Doctors are simply lost.
In the coming days, I will write an article on auto-immunity, but today I wanted to share with you a brief Bolus Theory perspective on Insulin Resistance and Type 2 diabetes.