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Originally Posted by coffeebean
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IVM is widely used as an anti-parasitic for a variety of diseases among humans too. It is one of the world's essential medicines. It all but eliminates river blindness in Africa. Scabies, and tons of other things too.
It also has strong anti-viral properties. At this point, there are at least 7 known mechanism of action against viruses, and the next thing you're going to read is that "to make it work, you have to have a massive dangerous dose". That was based on one In-vitro study and while they used massive doses, that particular method of action, is not the primary one thought to be effective in covid. That's the Importin alpha and beta channel, which is definitely anti-viral. At this point, it appears that IVM binds to the spike protein itself. This means that even a little bit of IVM in your system and the spike protein cannot dock to your cells.
You can read about it here:
Ivermectin Docks to the SARS-CoV-2 Spike Receptor-binding Domain Attached to ACE2 - PubMed.
IVM stays in your system quite some time, which is why you give your dog one pill a month of it.
Once again, there is a strong signal here, it's not crystals and chicken bones.