Experts explained Gunzburg's words about "markers" in the body vaccinated with

"Marker" that a person was vaccinated against covid-19, and not ill, the presence of antibodies only to the protein of the virus that was used to create the vaccine can serve. Another “marker” is antibodies to certain adenoviruses.

Experts interviewed by RBC commented on the words of the DIRECTOR of the National Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology named after N.F. Gamalei Alexander Gintsburg, who said that it is possible to identify those who bought a vaccination certificate and did not get vaccinated by the absence of vaccination markers in their bodies.

Gunzburg reported that the vaccination certificates of 80% of people who were seriously ill with the CORONAVIRUS and claimed to have been vaccinated with the Sputnik V vaccine were fake. “We see that people lack these markers in 80% of cases,” Gunzburg noted.

The point is that it is possible to distinguish people who have been vaccinated and recovered from COVID-19 by some differences in antibodies, Anatoly Altshtein, chief researcher at the Gamaleya Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology, explained to RBC. There are two possible markers:

the presence of antibodies to adenoviruses of two specific types, which are used in the Sputnik V vaccine as a platform for antigen delivery; the presence of antibodies only to the specific protein of the coronavirus that is used in the vaccine.

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