Tú estás citando un artículo que habla de los efectos secundarios de la trometamina cuando se aplica por vía intravenosa, generalmente después de una cirugía cardíaca. No puedes atribuir los mismos efectos secundarios a un medicamento cuando la administración y la dosis de dicho medicamento son totalmente diferentes. ¿Me puedes indicar un artículo confiable que diga que la trometamina produce efectos secundarios cuando aparece en pequeñas cantidades, como en el caso de una vacuna? Hay que tener todos estos detalles en cuenta.
Now, if you want to continue the discussion in English, I'd be happy to do that. You call me "limitado", let's see how you do in your non-native language. The tromethamine dose for metabolic acidosis is either 500 mL or 1000 mL (
). Compare that to a Pfizer vaccine that has a much smaller dose, only 0.3 mL. You don't notice any difference between 0.3 mL and 500 or 1000 mL?
If you want more proof, here you go (from
):
Experts, however, say these claims are false or misleading. In large quantities, Tris can be used as a drug, but here, as in other vaccines and medicines, the compound is present in only a very small amount as an
to help keep the vaccine
.
“It’s a really different use,” Dr.
, an infectious disease physician and vaccine scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told us of Tris being used therapeutically. “That’s put into somebody’s vein, it’s put in at larger concentrations. This is an infinitesimal amount of this buffer that goes into 0.2 milliliters of a vaccine just to keep the vaccine stable.”
According to FDA documents, each 0.2 milliliter pediatric dose
0.02 milligrams tromethamine and 0.13 milligrams of tromethamine hydrochloride.
So stop being an idiot anti-vaxxer and trying to mislead people about an important topic. Unless you know more than Dr. Talaat from Johns Hopkins or the career professionals at the FDA and the CDC.