Skip to content

Adeel Khan on Combining Peptides with Stem Cells to Treat Covid Vaccine Injuries

Dr Adeel Khan runs a clinic called Eterna Health, where he’s treated people like Tony Robbins, Jordan Peterson, and Israel Adesanya.

He was recently on a podcast with Rav Avora discussing:

  • The large number of patients he’s seeing with Covid or Covid vaccine-related injuries, particularly newly acquired autoimmune conditions.
  • The medical approach his clinic is taking to help those people.

Interestingly his clinic doesn’t advertise that they can help with Covid/Covid vaccine injuries, but instead says the patients are ending up with him because they don’t know where else to go.

The purpose of covering this content on the site is that there are many people who:

  • Have health issues post Covid / Covid vaccines, and have been unable to fix them using conventional medicine.

It should be added that this article does not endorse these methods of therapy. At this stage, they are highly experimental.

However, it is important to be able to discuss novel ideas, even if later it turns out they are flawed. Otherwise, we risk stagnation and lack of progress.

The main 3 treatments Dr Khan’s clinic uses are:

  • Bioregulator Peptides – that work specifically on the gut and the thymus gland. He mentions a duration of 4 weeks.
  • Mesenchymal stem cells – are injected into the bloodstream at the clinic.
  • Vagus nerve treatment – which is done on a case-by-case basis
  • More Bioregulator Peptides – for approximately another 4 weeks

Unfortunately in the interview, he doesn’t explain which specific bioregulator peptides he uses.

Bioregulator Peptides

Peptides are short chains of amino acids that the body uses for signaling. Examples of peptides people might know are insulin, oxytocin and vasopressin. Also, recent weight loss injections such as semalglutide (aka ozempic), are peptides.

When the phrase bioregulator peptides is used, it typically means that these peptides focus their effect on a specific organ, tissue or pathway in the body.

A more precise definition was given by Nathalie Niddam on Instagram where she says:

  • Bioregulator peptides are always only 2-4 amino acids long
  • They bind to DNA and operate as an epigenetic switch to upregulate the production of certain proteins. As opposed to stimulating receptors on a cell, like other peptides might.

She adds that there are 21 known bioregulators for different tissue types, glands and organs.

Perhaps the most well known researcher of bioregulator peptides is a Russian called Vladimir Khavinson, whose research led to 70 new peptides. He was also championing these peptides for the purposes of living longer. Frustratingly, Prof. Khavinson died at the start of 2024 at 77 years – and the cause of his death was not made public.

Ideally, you want a person championing drugs for longevity to live longer than that. Whilst it’s above average for a Russian male:

Prof Khavinson was basically aristocracy within Russian society, as he was a health advisor to Vladimir Putin, and well respected in his field. So you’d anticipate him doing better than what’s an average for an American or Russian.

Vladimir Khavinson (RIP) – a pioneer in peptide bioregulators – source

Synthetic vs Extracts

One last thing to point out about bioregulator peptides is that they come in two forms; synthetic and extracts. Synthetic is as you’d imagine, produced in a laboratory. Whereas extracts come from animals.

Going back to Dr Khan’s therapy. All I know currently is that they use bioregulator peptides that work on the gut, Thymus gland, and possibly more. Which specific bioregulators, I don’t yet know.

Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs)

About MSCs

Typically when people talk about getting stem cells injected, it’s mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs).

The name is actually a bit of a misnomer because they do not operate the same way as embryonic or induced pluripotent stem cells. With the latter two being able to differentiate into any type of cell.

MSCs can differentiate into some, but not all cell types. Additionally, they have an immunomodulatory effect (pertinent in the context of autoimmune issues) and they support tissue repair.

Perhaps what’s extra special is that you can use other people’s MSCs, rather than the patient’s own (“non-autologous”), without provoking a problematic immune response. Meaning that you can harvest MSCs from sources such as discarded fat, umbilical cord and placenta.

(It’s not yet possible to grow MSCs independently)

Dr Khan’s Commentary on the MSCs

Dr Khan says in the interview that when injecting MSCs, most of them get trapped in the lungs, where they interact with Bronchus-Associated Lymphoid Tissue (BALT). He describes this as a gateway to the immune system and says it helps in terms of regulating the immune system through a process of macrophage polarization. Where the white blood cells get trained to send the right signals, potentially retraining the immune system.

He posits that this can help with the heart.

However, if that doesn’t work, they do have an interventional radiologist who can inject MSCs directly into the heart. Due to that being more invasive, they’ll start with the less invasive methods first.

Vagus Nerve Treatment

During the interview, Dr Khan doesn’t explain what the vagus nerve treatment is. However, he does have an Instagram Reel where he demonstrates a vagus nerve treatment, which I presume, is the same thing, but don’t know for sure.

They appear to use ultrasound to target the vagus nerve on the neck, and then inject peptides into it.

He says in the comments they specifically use the GHK, BPC157 and TB4 peptides:

GHK is Copper peptide GHK-Cu, BPC-157 is a very popular peptide already, and then TB4 is Thymosin beta-4.

He mentions in another comment on that Reel some other peptides he uses:

He describes the process as follows: “when peptides are used to target the vagus nerve and stellate ganglion, they may assist in “resetting” the signaling patterns in the central nervous system.

This can potentially lead to a more balanced activation of the parasympathetic and sympathetic branches, promoting relaxation and reducing stress responses.

As a result, patients may experience improved calmness, better sleep, fewer panic attacks, and potentially even relief from conditions like PTSD.”

Whilst the treatment sounds very experimental, it also sounds like something you could quickly verify in terms of efficacy. Basically, are patients feeling calmer, better rested and less anxious after the therapy, or not?

Dr Khan says in this Reel that the vagus nerve treatment may be his favourite, due to how quickly the results and benefits are experienced by patients (worth a listen).

Roundup

So, above I’ve laid out my interpretation of the information Dr Khan shared around their Covid injury treatment protocol.

My personal take was that it all sounded a bit “too good to be true”. In the sense that he didn’t bring up any potential side effects or issues with the treatments.

We could perhaps put this down to him being a business owner, and having a financial interest in these treatments.

So it’s really down to us to remain cautious, and skeptical and do our own due diligence.

That said, as I mentioned at the start of the article, there’s not a lot of good solutions out there for people suffering from Covid or Covid vaccine injuries, so I think it’s worth exploring and discussing new ideas like this.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments