- A peer-reviewed Turkish study found mRNA vaccines caused a 60% reduction in primordial follicles (fertility-critical egg cells) in rats, with inactivated vaccines showing a 34% decline. These cells are non-renewable, suggesting potential permanent fertility loss if replicated in humans.
- A preprint study of 1.3 million Czech women revealed 33% fewer successful pregnancies among vaccinated women, alongside a 21% national fertility rate drop. Clinicians report rising miscarriages, fetal deaths and menstrual disruptions post-vaccination.
- LNPs in mRNA vaccines accumulate in ovaries, driving spike protein production linked to inflammation, cell death (caspase-3) and fibrosis. Independent studies confirm LNPs cross into fetal tissue and correlate with higher miscarriage rates.
- Experts (e.g., Dr. Angus Dalgleish, epidemiologist Nic Hulscher) demand a halt to mRNA vaccines, citing known risks since 2017 and institutional suppression of safety concerns. Whistleblowers allege public health agencies prioritized profit over reproductive health.
- Birth rates plummeted in multiple countries post-vaccine rollout (e.g., Europe, Taiwan), fueling protests against mandates. Critics warn of a “generational crisis” and urge natural health alternatives, informed consent and independent research to protect reproductive rights.
A groundbreaking study published in the journal
Vaccines has ignited urgent concerns worldwide, suggesting that
mRNA and inactivated COVID-19 vaccines may be causing irreversible damage to female ovarian reserves in rats. Turkish researchers observed a staggering 60% reduction in primordial follicles — the foundational cells necessary for fertility — in rats administered mRNA vaccines. The findings, which experts say warrant immediate scrutiny in humans, align with mounting real-world data showing
plummeting global birth rates and rising miscarriages among vaccinated populations. The study, alongside complementary research and medical testimonies, has galvanized calls to halt mRNA vaccine mandates, exposing potential systemic risks to reproductive health and human liberty.
Evidence emerges: Vaccines linked to 60% drop in irreplaceable egg cells
The
peer-reviewed Turkish study, led by eight researchers, analyzed the effects of Pfizer-style mRNA and Sinovac’s inactivated vaccines on 30 female rats. After two human-equivalent doses, mRNA-vaccinated rats showed a shocking 60% decline in primordial follicles (an average of 42.4 per ovary compared to 106.7 in unvaccinated rats). Non-mRNA vaccines also caused significant harm, with a 34% reduction.
Primordial follicles, described as “the foundation of fertility” by the authors, are finite and non-renewable — women are born with all the eggs they will ever possess. “Biologically irreversible” damage to this pool, as seen in the study, means permanent fertility loss if replicated in humans. “This loss does not regenerate,” emphasized epidemiologist Nic Hulscher in his Substack analysis,
noting that such harm could accelerate early menopause and depress global birth rates.
Dr. Margaret Christensen, a gynecologist at the Carpathia Collaborative, corroborated these findings with clinical observations: “The impact on fertility and menstrual cycles has been alarming. We’re seeing rising miscarriages and fetal deaths — not just decreased conception.”
From lab to real-world declines: Human data mirrors ovarian damage
The Turkish study’s implications extend beyond rodent models. A concurrent preprint on over 1.3 million Czech women (ages 18–39) revealed vaccine recipients had 33% fewer successful pregnancies compared to unvaccinated peers, even as fertility treatments surged. The Czech Republic’s total fertility rate dropped 21% during the study period.
“This isn’t theoretical,” said Dr. Angus Dalgleish, a professor of oncology at St. George’s, University of London, who called rat studies “a standard and reliable model for evaluating fertility.” He pointed to lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) — the delivery vehicles in mRNA vaccines — as a critical culprit. LNPs, he noted, exhibit a “particular preference for ovaries,” where they trigger mRNA-driven spike protein production. Spike protein has been linked to placental harm, fetal death and inflammation — mechanisms aligned with the Turkish study’s observed increases in caspase-3 (a cell-death enzyme) and inflammatory markers (TGF-β1, VEGF), which cause follicle death and fibrosis.
Independent
research has corroborated these biologic pathways. A BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth study found higher miscarriage rates in vaccinated women, while a 2023 Molecular Therapy paper revealed LNP-mRNA crosses into fetal tissue within an hour. “The Pfizer Papers” whistleblower Naomi Wolf noted that LNPs’ reproductive harm has been known since 2017, predating the pandemic.
Growing movement for transparency: Calls to suspend mRNA use intensify
The study’s release coincides with escalating global protests against vaccine mandates and what critics call institutional secrecy. “These data show our public agencies have compromised the capacity to create life,” wrote Hulscher, citing the “Bio-Pharmaceutical Complex” as a suppression force.
Medical professionals and advocacy groups are uniting for action. Dalgleish, echoing advocates like Karl Jablonowski of Children’s Health Defense, urged immediate pauses: “The details here about AMH antibodies and follicular damage are screaming—stop these vaccines now.” Jablonowski emphasized that harms are not hypothetical; many vaccine victims “were harmed before [safety] studies began,” with research now “a damage assessment.”
Dr. Robert Chandler, MD, whose prior work exposed vaccine-linked fertility declines, highlighted broader societal stakes: “Nineteen months after
mass mRNA rollouts, birth rate drops have occurred from Europe to Taiwan. This isn’t happenstance.”
A critical crossroads for reproductive rights and global health policy
The convergence of animal and human data paints a dire picture: mRNA vaccines may be eroding fertility with irreversible consequences. “If this applies to humans, it’s a generational crisis,” said Christensen. Critics argue that institutions prioritized profit and compliance over mothers’ rights, citing systemic failures to fund independent safety research.
As calls for vaccine skepticism grow, so does the urgency of alternatives — natural health practices, rigorous informed consent and independent journalism — stand as vital defenses for truth and autonomy. Protecting women’s bodies must come before corporate agendas.
In an era where trust has eroded, this study underscores a pivotal question: Can societies preserve true human liberty when mechanisms to perpetuate life itself are weaponized?
Sources for this article include:
ChildrensHealthDefense.org
TheFocalPoints.com
MDPI.com