Spike Support vs Eliquis 5 mg 2x day

  • Spike Support vs Eliquis 5 mg 2x day

    Posted by Phyllis Shaw on May 26, 2025 at 9:00 am EDT

    Hello,

    I understnd the Spike support formula can be blood thinning and probably is a better product for the body than Eliqus. I was wondering how does Spike Support compare with Eliqus in terms of blood thinning. Also seems to address inflammation. I was wondering if Spike support 1 capsule 2x day could be an effective replacement for Eliqus. I have shown the Spike support formula to cardiologists and they dont understand the ingredients.

    Thank you!

    jeb77 replied 4 days, 11 hours ago 6 Members · 6 Replies
  • 6 Replies
  • IMA-GregT

    Member
    May 26, 2025 at 11:36 am EDT

    HI dal123 – could you give us a link please to the Spike Support Formula you’re highlighting. Thanks in advance.

  • dickatlee

    Member
    May 26, 2025 at 8:20 pm EDT

    He’s probably referring to The Wellness Company product:

    https://www.twc.health/products/ultimate-spike-detox

    Nattokinase is mentioned over and over again in the FLCCC/IMA protocols, but I’ve been wary of it for just this reason. I take Eliquis, and I don’t want to exsanguinate over some small injury. So I’m hoping someone who actually can answer this accurately will respond.

  • dab

    Member
    May 27, 2025 at 1:30 am EDT

    Dr Mercola has written about the benefits of Nattokinase (and the other enzymes lumbrokinase and serrapeptase) in at least one article. Search his website to learn more.

  • Wolfgang May

    Member
    May 27, 2025 at 1:34 am EDT

    The recommendation of FLCCC Nattokinase 2x 500mg/ day with food (a fibrinolytic and platelet aggregation inhibitor targets the abnormal blood clottng that can occur in spike protein related desease. Note interaction with aspirin and other anticoagulants.

    Other groups give Aspirin, Clopidogrel, apixaban together with proton inhibitors (Stellenbosh south Africa) ore Sulodexin (european Group) to reduce abnormal blood cotting.

  • Phyllis Shaw

    Member
    May 27, 2025 at 11:47 am EDT

    But HOW does this compare to the action of Eliquis?

  • jeb77

    Member
    May 27, 2025 at 7:06 pm EDT

    I asked ChatGPT to help me formulate this response:

    The spike protein (especially from SARS-CoV-2 and the mRNA vaccines) has been found to interact with fibrin in abnormal ways, contributing to persistent microclots, inflammation, and impaired circulation.

    Nattokinase can [potentially] help this but Eliquis doesn’t.

    <b data-start=”88″ data-end=”112″>🟡 <strong data-start=”95″ data-end=”110″>Nattokinase

    <ul data-start=”113″ data-end=”679″>

  • <strong data-start=”115″ data-end=”132″>What it does:<br data-start=”132″ data-end=”135″> A natural enzyme derived from fermented soybeans (natto) that <strong data-start=”199″ data-end=”221″>breaks down fibrin directly.

  • <strong data-start=”236″ data-end=”250″>Mechanism:<br data-start=”250″ data-end=”253″> It acts like a <strong data-start=”270″ data-end=”292″>fibrinolytic agent — similar to your body’s plasmin — helping to <strong data-start=”339″ data-end=”379″>dissolve clots and reduce microclots, including those abnormally formed by the spike protein.

  • <strong data-start=”440″ data-end=”486″>Why it may help with spike protein issues:<br data-start=”486″ data-end=”489″> Because the spike protein promotes <strong data-start=”526″ data-end=”554″>abnormal fibrin clotting that resists natural breakdown, nattokinase can be <strong data-start=”606″ data-end=”627″>especially useful in degrading these “sticky” spike-fibrin complexes.

  • <hr data-start=”681″ data-end=”684″>
    <b data-start=”686″ data-end=”717″>🔴 <strong data-start=”693″ data-end=”715″>Eliquis (Apixaban)
    <ul data-start=”718″ data-end=”1301″>

  • <strong data-start=”720″ data-end=”737″>What it does:<br data-start=”737″ data-end=”740″> A <strong data-start=”744″ data-end=”774″>prescription blood thinner (anticoagulant) that <strong data-start=”796″ data-end=”827″>prevents clots from forming by inhibiting <strong data-start=”842″ data-end=”855″>Factor Xa, a key clotting enzyme.

  • <strong data-start=”882″ data-end=”896″>Mechanism:<br data-start=”896″ data-end=”899″> It <strong data-start=”904″ data-end=”934″>reduces new clot formation but <strong data-start=”939″ data-end=”996″>does not dissolve existing clots or break down fibrin.

  • <strong data-start=”1001″ data-end=”1058″>Why it doesn’t help with spike-induced fibrin issues:<br data-start=”1058″ data-end=”1061″> Eliquis <strong data-start=”1071″ data-end=”1098″>won’t remove microclots already formed due to spike-fibrin interactions. It may help <strong data-start=”1160″ data-end=”1188″>prevent additional clots, but it won’t address the <strong data-start=”1215″ data-end=”1259″>abnormal clot resistance or inflammation caused by spike protein–fibrin complexes.

  • <hr data-start=”1303″ data-end=”1306″>

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