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The European Health Agency (EMA) and its Pharmaceutical Risk Assessment Division (PRAC) said it had decided to consider reports from patients and healthcare workers, clinical trial data and theories about links between Covid vaccines and nRNA technology and menstrual cycle disorder in women.
A study in Norway reported increased bleeding or disappearance of menstrual periods in women after receiving the injection, but earlier the EMA said it had found no link between the phenomenon and vaccines.
Following the review of the evidence, the EMAs’ ‘pharma-vigilance’ branch said it would conduct an assessment of patient and physician reports on the consequences of mRNA (RNA messenger) injections used by Pfizer vaccine manufacturers (PFE.N)/ BioNTech (22UAy.DE) Moderna (MRNA.O) AstraZeneca and Johnson.
The European agency said a cause-and-effect relationship between vaccines and reporting has not yet been established.
EMA said that menstrual cycle disorders can occur from some internal medical conditions, while according to her “such cases have been reported even after infection with COVID-19”.
Vaccinations against COVID-19 are associated with a temporary change in the length of cycles, according to a STUDY funded by the National Institutes of Health, which collected data from 4,000 users with a mobile app that tracked women’s menstrual cycles.
On Friday EMQA added that there is no evidence that Covid vaccines affect human fertility. // Reuters //
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