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zenodo.org/record/1229348

"Experimental infection with Ad5, Ad36, and Ad37 produced excess adiposity or weight gain in animals."

Good riddance. That's the type of carrier virus that almost all the non-mRNA covid vaccines are using. Ad5 specifically is used by the Sputnik vaccine for the 2nd dose. The same vaccine that Brazilian authorities found to replicate and possibly infect others.

Obesity is not something that would be easily caught in the short trials that have been done to date...

Remember that these carrier viruses are _not_ common in humans. Astra Zeneca even uses one that only infects chimpanzees naturally, and iiuc, the other adenoviruses used by other vaccines mostly infect non-human primates.

You have to use something uncommon, or otherwise the vaccine wouldn't work reliably due to people already having antibodies to it. Sputnik V actually uses two different ones, to make it less likely for the 2nd dose to be defeated by antibodies developed in the 1st dose.

Specifically, the particular strains used. Some strains of adenoviruses are common in humans. Others are not.

@pete I was thinking, because viral vector has been used in veterinary medicine for a while it might be safer than the completely novel mRNA ones.

Not so sure anymore.

On the other hand with people around me shedding the viral vector I’ll have it anyway...

@lucash_dev I won't be surprised if viral vector tech gets banned after someone creates a deadly disease with it by accident.

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