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Exposing the Dark Truth of Our World

‘Injectable pacemaker’ allows smartphones to ‘monitor heart conditions’

A new nanotech heart ‘solution’ reported. Photo: AJUY A Brave New World.

Researchers have revealed a self-assembling nanoparticle ‘solution’ for patients suffering from arrhythmia, with a polymer chain forming around the heart after being injected into the body.

NANOTECH PACEMAKER

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Swedish scientists say they may have found a radical nanotech ‘solution’ to ‘keep the heart beating when it runs into minor problems and care isn’t accessible’.

A newly developed “injectable heart stimulator” can reportedly temporarily ‘correct arrhythmia’ by using your smartphone as a power source.

Yes, injectable. It’s a special syringe, with a needle thinner than a human hair, loaded with nanoparticles suspended in a solution.

When injected, these nanoparticles self-assemble into a long polymer chain, forming a ‘structure’ around the heart that conducts electricity.

Arrhythmia occurs when there are disturbances in the heart’s electrical signals, causing it to beat too fast, slow, or irregularly.

This injected ‘structure’ can “…regulate heartbeats, correct arrhythmia, and even facilitate ECG measurements, thanks to the electrode’s integration with the body’s cells”.

Researchers say the energy supplied can come from everyday handheld devices.

For instance, an ordinary smartphone connected to a cable – stretching out from the injection site near the heart – is enough to charge the polymer.

It sounds like something right out of a science fiction novel… but could soon be a reality.

“If you connect a mobile phone to the injection site near the heart, you can temporarily stimulate the heart’s rhythm for up to five days,” said lead author Umut Aydemir, a doctoral researcher on the project.

Published in the journal Nature, images of a test of the technology on a chicken embryo show the solution as a black fluid covering its heart.

Images of a test on a chicken embryo published in Nature show the solution as a black fluid covering its heart.

So, what happens after the five days have finished?

The team says that after the electrode has done its job, it “harmlessly disintegrates” and “gets naturally flushed out by the body, leaving nothing behind”.

Boy, oh boy.

With ‘successful’ initial trials completed (poor chickens), the team is now gearing up for the next phase –experimenting with larger animals like pigs to help pave the way for human testing (poor pigs).

(And, poor humans when this ultimately hits the marketplace).

The team responsible say they also want to eventually develop a smartphone app that allows users to ‘adequately regulate their hearts’, and possibly see more details.

If all goes well, they believe the invention could become “…the ultimate outdoor emergency gadget for hikers, explorers, or soldiers”.

This cyborg-like breakthrough shows an intriguing view of a future where our everyday devices ‘contribute to our health’ beyond measuring workouts and checking stress levels.

The beginning of true human-machine symbiosis is upon us, folks.

TRANSHUMAN SYMBIOSIS

Often, arrhythmia can be treated with medication.

But, as we have seen multiple times in recent years, simple ‘solutions’ are now being ‘upgraded’, as the old methods supposedly can’t keep up anymore (even though they can).

And, as crazy as this story sounds, it is part of a long list of news stories that really make you stand back.

It seems the future is injectable and dissolvable everything.

As we have discussed with vaccines, for example, the dissolvable future is likely for the product as backlash continues over the years, with new ‘needless delivery’ methods in planning.

The world is evolving from Big Pharma controlling through pills and ailments alone, to the boosted techno transhumanism agenda, where the ‘medical experts’ will be inside of your body, and mind in ways we could have ever imagined. And then, it will go commercial, beyond medicine.

Let’s not forget brain chips, which have become a massive talking point recently.

Elon Musk’s Neuralink has already implanted its first brain-chip into a human, and will continue.

Just last month, one company has announced an incorporation of OpenAI’s ChatGPT into their brain-computer interface (BCI) software, offering “prompt-based interactions” for users.

And it could all go very wrong.

A recent report by the U.S. Office of the Secretary of Defence delves into how brain networking and other technological advancements could unleash new military conflict.

Duke University futurist, Nita Farahany, stated last year in a speech at the World Economic Forum that ‘hacking of the brain’ has already arrived.

Bioethicists are already asking the (disturbing) question: Can, and should, biomedical interventions be used to make people ‘morally better’?

And this type of dystopic push is happening right here at home.

Queensland researchers have published a new study that highlights the need to ‘map the brains of children’ to ‘identify and intervene early in mental health problems’:

Another collaborative project, involving researchers at the University of Queensland (UQ), have created the world’s first integrated and completely wireless remote care platform.

This digital platform allows clinicians to monitor patients remotely, as well as adjust the device to treat and alleviate. The key word there is remote. Controlling of the devices and gadgets from anywhere.

From nanotechnology to injectable and dissolvable ‘solutions’, the guise of ‘helping society’ is allowing for those ultimately controlling this agenda to breach the most fundamental elements of the human.

‘Got a heart condition? We’ll inject a nanotech pacemaker into you that forms a black goo around your heart! Don’t worry, it’s just an electrical energy field that we can control remotely!’

This is biblical type stuff, folks.

And, unfortunately, the tech-loving future generations will eat it all up, because they won’t know different.

Source: https://tottnews.com/2024/09/11/injectable-pacemaker-heart-conditions/

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