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The symptoms united in this syndrome originate from two sources. On the one hand a large
number of these symptoms are frequently cited in the literature as post-vaccination
symptoms; other symptoms are my own observations. It must be stressed in this context that
any symptom that manifests itself following vaccination and only disappears after
treatment with the potentised vaccine is caused by the vaccine concerned.
The PVS can be divided into an acute and a chronic syndrome. The following are the main
symptoms of the acute syndrome: fever, convulsions, absent-mindedness,
encephalitis and/or meningitis, limbs swollen around the point of inoculation,
whooping-type cough, bronchitis, diarrhoea, excessive somnolence, frequent and
inconsolable crying, penetrating and heart-rending shrieking (cri encéphalique),
fainting/shock, pneumonia, death, cot death (since the Japanese delayed the
whooping-cough vaccination to the age of two years, cot deaths has been practically
obliterated in Japan1).
By carefully studying and recording the cases we arrive at the following catalogue of chronic post-vaccination symptoms: colds, amber or green phlegm, inflamed eyes, loss of eye contact, squinting, inflammation of the middle ear, bronchitis, expectoration, coughing, asthma, eczema, allergies, inflamed joints, tiredness and lack of vigour, excessive thirst, diabetes, diarrhoea, constipation, head-aches, disturbed sleep with periods of waking and crying, epilepsy, rigidity of the back, muscle cramps, light-headedness, lack of concentration, loss of memory, growth disturbances, lack of coordination, disturbed development, behavioural problems such as fidgeting, aggressiveness, irritation, moodi-ness, emotional imbalance, confusion, loss of will-power, mental torpidity.
This list must needs be incomplete as the symptoms of post-vaccination illness can be
extremely varied. The diagnosis is based not so much on the actual symptom as on the point
of time of its appearance.
To add to the complication it is not possible to attribute certain individual symptoms of
the PVS specifically to the DKTP*- or DTP* vaccination, others to the MMR-vaccination and
yet others to the HIB* vaccination. In practice it must be accepted that each vaccine can
be responsible for several of the symptoms named and also for additional symptoms that
have not been mentioned.
There is also no clear demarcation between acute and chronic complaints as the acute
conditions are often the beginning of chronic suffering.
The fact that someone has displayed no direct or acute reaction to a vaccination does not necessarily exclude the possibility of the vaccine being the cause of chronic complaints. These complaints usually become clear only after one, two or even more weeks have passed and dismissing a diagnosis of PVS in chronic cases because of the time-lapse between the cause (vaccination) and the appearance of the condition is fundamentally wrong. Ellen, case 12, page 29 demonstrates this. It is often only after the second, third or fourth administration of the vaccine that problems suddenly occur. A good example of this is Jurgen (case 1).