Vaxtherapy, a Multiphase Therapeutic Protocol Approach for Longvax, the COVID-19 Vaccine-Induced Disease: Spike Persistence as the Core Culprit and Its Downstream Effects.

Publication date: Jun 30, 2025

Background/Objectives: Chronic illness after COVID-19 vaccination (longvax) lacks a therapeutic protocol anchored in pathophysiology. Persistent vaccine derived spike protein appears to trigger microvascular fibrin amyloid microclots, immune dysfunction, pathogen reactivation and multisystem injury. This article proposes an integrative approach, Vaxtherapy, to tackle these mechanisms. Methods: A narrative synthesis of peer reviewed literature from 2021 to 2025 on spike related injury and vaccine adverse events was conducted, supplemented by clinical case series and mechanistic observations from long COVID. The findings were arranged into a four stage therapeutic sequence ordered by pathophysiological precedence. Results: Stage one aims to reopen hypoperfused tissue through oral fibrinolytics that degrade fibrin amyloid resistant microclots; stage two intends to neutralise circulating or tissue bound spike via a receptor binding domain monoclonal antibody cocktail; stage three seeks to eliminate reactivated viral or microbial reservoirs with targeted antivirals or antimicrobials once perfusion is improved; and stage four aspires to support tissue repair with mitochondrial supplements and, when indicated, cell based therapies. Omitting or reordering stages may reduce efficacy or foster resistance. Conclusions: This hypothesis driven framework outlines a biologically plausible roadmap for longvax research. By matching interventions to specific mechanisms (fibrinolysis, spike neutralisation, pathogen clearance and regeneration), it aims to guide controlled trials and compassionate pilot programs directed at durable recovery rather than chronic symptom management.

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Concepts Keywords
Amyloid COVID-19
Cocktail mRNA
Pathophysiology protocol
Pilot SARS-CoV-2
Vaccine therapy
vaccine injured
vaccine-induced disease

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Chronic illness
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO protein
disease IDO pathogen
disease MESH long COVID
disease IDO cell
disease IDO symptom
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease IDO blood
disease MESH tumorigenesis
disease MESH sequelae
disease IDO host
disease MESH dysautonomia
disease MESH immune exhaustion
disease IDO process
disease MESH Lymphadenopathy
disease MESH infection
disease MESH MCTD
disease MESH Thrombocytopenia
disease MESH thrombosis
disease IDO production
disease MESH vasculitis
disease IDO endotoxin
disease IDO algorithm
disease MESH emergency
drug DRUGBANK Ubiquinol
drug DRUGBANK Serrapeptase
drug DRUGBANK Papain
drug DRUGBANK Bromelains
disease MESH hemorrhage
disease MESH drug interactions
disease MESH clinical course
disease IDO intervention
pathway KEGG Viral replication
drug DRUGBANK Gold
pathway REACTOME Immune System
pathway KEGG Drug metabolism
disease MESH drug tolerance
drug DRUGBANK Taurine
drug DRUGBANK Resveratrol
drug DRUGBANK Cyanocobalamin
disease MESH syndromes
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
disease MESH autoimmunity
drug DRUGBANK Acetylsalicylic acid
disease MESH cardiovascular risk factors
drug DRUGBANK Fibrinogen Human
drug DRUGBANK Coagulation factor VII human
drug DRUGBANK Beroctocog alfa
disease MESH ischemic stroke
drug DRUGBANK Sodium lauryl sulfate
drug DRUGBANK Edetic Acid
disease MESH death
disease IDO immunodeficiency
drug DRUGBANK Rituximab
disease MESH follicular lymphoma
disease MESH relapses
disease MESH hypersensitivity
disease MESH anaphylaxis
disease MESH antibody dependent enhancement

Original Article

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