09/10/2025
They tricked you into taking yet another harmful drug for way longer than it has ever been tested, and these chemical drugs have a cumulative effect.
Ivermectin is highly lipophilic (fat-soluble), which means it accumulates in the fat tissues and the liver. The package insert notes that it distributes widely into body tissues, including fat, where it can build up over time. That is why these people are experiencing these symptoms, which are clearly explained in the package inserts.
This is why people may take it for days, weeks, or months with no issues and then suddenly crash. The drug stores in your fat tissue and leaks out over time, overloading the liver, the nervous system, and the immune system. This is why organ failure is a side effect. And the studies were only run for a few weeks, not months and years.
The package insert and safety data sheets show this cumulative effect clearly: even when each dose is “within guidelines,” the buildup in fat tissue can lead to neurological damage, hormone disruption, and toxicity.
👉 FDA label (shows tissue distribution and adverse effects):
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2009/050742s026lbl.pdf
👉 Merck safety data sheet (warns of damage from prolonged or repeated exposure):
https://www.merck.com/docs/product/safety-data-sheets/ah-sds/Ivermectin%20Formulation_AH_MX_EN.pdf
Adverse reactions and side effects listed in the package insert:
• Headache
• Dizziness
• Fatigue
• Somnolence (excessive sleepiness)
• Vertigo
• Nausea
• Vomiting
• Diarrhea
• Abdominal pain
• Loss of appetite (anorexia)
• Muscle pain (myalgia)
• Joint pain (arthralgia)
• Low blood pressure (hypotension)
• Tachycardia (rapid heart rate)
• Swelling / edema (facial and peripheral)
• Lymph node swelling (lymphadenopathy)
• Itching (pruritus)
• Rash
• Urticaria (hives)
• Fever
• Chills
• Increased sweating
• Conjunctivitis (eye inflammation)
• Ocular hemorrhage (bleeding in the eye)
• Ocular pain / discomfort
• Visual disturbances (blurred or altered vision)
• Hepatitis (liver inflammation)
• Elevated liver enzymes (AST/ALT increases)
• Neurological events including seizures, ataxia (loss of muscle control), confusion, encephalopathy, coma
• Toxic epidermal necrolysis (severe skin reaction)
• Allergic reactions including anaphylaxis
Why coma can happen physiologically over time:
As I mentioned before: ivermectin is highly lipophilic (fat-soluble). This means it builds up in fat tissue, the liver, and the nervous system. With repeated or long-term use, the drug can gradually leak back out of fat stores into the bloodstream. This creates a cumulative toxic effect.
Physiologically, here’s how that can lead to coma:
1. Central nervous system depression – Ivermectin crosses into the brain in higher or repeated doses. It overactivates GABA and glutamate-gated chloride channels, which can shut down neuronal activity. This sedation can escalate from drowsiness → confusion → coma.
2. Liver toxicity – As the liver struggles to clear the drug, metabolic waste and toxic buildup can contribute to encephalopathy (brain dysfunction).
3. Immune & inflammatory responses – Cumulative exposure can trigger inflammatory reactions and microhemorrhages, making the brain even more vulnerable.
In short: coma isn’t random. It’s the end stage of ivermectin’s cumulative neurotoxicity and liver overload. It starts with subtle dizziness and fatigue, then escalates through confusion and encephalopathy, and in some cases progresses to loss of consciousness.
👉 Official FDA package insert (Stromectol®):
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2009/050742s026lbl.pdf
Stop poisoning yourself with yet another chemical drug. Natural parasite cleansing is way safer.
🛑 STOP running to pharmaceuticals thinking there won’t be side effects.