
Dr. Hossein Sadrzadeh had an allergic reaction after receiving the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at Boston Medical Center on Christmas Eve
A Boston doctor with a shellfish allergy suffered a severe reaction after receiving the Moderna coronavirus vaccine.
Dr. Hossein Sadrzadeh, who works as a geriatric oncologist at Boston Medical Center, became dizzy and experienced an increase in heart rate after taking jab on Christmas Eve.
It is the first such severe reaction that has been documented so far with the Moderna jab, which was approved last week and began launching on Monday.
Federal agencies are investigating at least six cases in which people have suffered anaphylaxis after receiving the Pfizer / BioNTech alternative vaccine.
Sadrzadeh also describes how he felt his tongue numb and sting as his blood pressure dropped as he burst into cold sweat.
“It was the same anaphylactic reaction I experience when I eat shellfish,” Dr. Sadrzadeh told The New York Times. “I don’t want anyone going through this.”
Sadrzadeh quickly used an EpiPen that he had brought with him only if he had suffered such a reaction.
He was taken to the emergency room and discharged four hours later after being examined.

The doctor works at Boston Medical Center and had his injection there as well

Sadrzadeh used EpiPen while suffering from an allergic reaction and was rushed to a nearby emergency room.
“The main concern for me as a human being and as a doctor … I have to spread the word to people … People should have EpiPen with them if they have allergic reactions,” Sadrzadeh told CBS46, urging Moderna to investigate further.
In a statement, David Kibbe, a spokesman for Boston Medical Center, said that Dr. Sadrzadeh “felt that he was developing an allergic reaction and that he was being allowed to administer EpiPen personally.
“He was taken to the emergency department, evaluated, treated, observed and discharged. She’s fine today.
In the weeks following the distribution of the vaccines, there were few allergic reactions in those who received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.
During the Pfizer study phase – when 44,000 and a half people were examined the vaccine – a small number of allergic reactions were recorded.
But the company said the rate at which people suffered was equal to the number of people with allergies in the general public, so it was not abnormal.
Sadrzadeh’s case is the first known reaction to someone who received the injection with Moderna.

It is the first known case of allergic reaction to a Moderna coronavirus vaccine. Pictured, COVID-19 Moderna vaccine unpacked last week at Boston Medical Center pharmacy
Vaccines are made using similar ingredients, both of which require two photos a few weeks apart. It is not known which ingredient in coronavirus vaccines can cause severe allergic reactions in some people.
“It is known that one of the components in both vaccines, polyethylene glycol, may be unusually associated with allergic reactions,” said Dr. Peter Marks, who heads the FDA’s Center for Biological Assessment and Research, during the last briefing. week.
– He could be guilty here. And that’s why we will be watching very carefully when we see the launch of the Moderna vaccine, ‘he said.
Vaccine manufacturers and National Institutes of Health are considering conducting clinical trials with Covid-19 vaccines in highly allergic populations in an attempt to help understand the rate of allergic reactions and their causes.

Courtney Senechal, RN, is preparing a photo of the Moderna vaccine at the East Boston Neighborhood Health Center in East Boston. Health workers at the East Boston Health Center are considered to be among the first in Massachusetts to receive the Moderna vaccine.
CDC spokesman Tom Skinner said information about reactions to the new vaccines would be posted on the website next week.
The agency recommended that people with allergies continue to receive photos and wait 15 minutes after the injection before leaving the medical center.
Anyone who has previously had an anaphylactic reaction should be monitored for 30 minutes.
To date, more than 1.1 million vaccines have been given to people in the United States, and severe allergic reactions remain extremely rare.
“This should not discourage people who are not at high risk,” Dr. Merin Kuruvilla, an allergist and immunologist at Emory University, told the Times.
Thousands of healthcare workers have so far received the Pfizer punch, and it is hoped that – with two feet now on the market – the vaccination launch rate will continue to accelerate.
The Moderna vaccine is available in quantities of up to 100 doses and can be stored for 30 days in standard temperature refrigerators.
In contrast, Pfizer vaccinations come in boxes of 975 doses, must be shipped and stored at -94 F (-70 Celsius) and can only be kept for five days at standard refrigerator temperatures.
Officials in Texas and Arkansas told Reuters that Moderna is expected to be the main vaccine for rural areas, which often lack ultra-cold storage equipment to store full trays of Pfizer bottles.
Once the plastic on a 975-dose Pfizer tray is opened, recipients only have 120 hours to use the vaccine.
“Logistics will be easier with the Moderna vaccine,” said Jesse Breidenbach, the pharmacy’s senior executive director for Sanford Health, which operates nearly four dozen hospitals in South Dakota, North Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa.
“Thirty days in the fridge will make it a little easier to treat,” Breidenbach said.
Moderna vaccine can cause swelling in people with facial fillings, warns dermatologist
Lip fillers react poorly to one of the coronavirus vaccines, an FDA advisory committee said – endangering celebrities, including Kylie Jenner.
Anyone with facial cosmetic fillers could have swelling and inflammation, according to experts, after several participants in the study experienced side effects.
A California dermatologist said the reaction is immunological, ABC7 reported yesterday.
Dr. Shirley Chi said that any side effect can be easily treated with steroids and antihistamines, adding: “Your immune system that causes inflammation is accelerated when you receive a vaccine, that’s how it should work.
“So it makes sense that you will see an immune response in certain areas where I see a substance that is not a natural substance in your body.”
Patients who received the Moderna vaccine, which was approved by regulators last Friday, all had swelling in the area where the filling was placed.
Two patients had cheek filling six months before the vaccine and one had lip filling two days after the vaccine. The reactions were resolved quickly with medical assistance, Dr. Chi added, so they should not stop those who have fillings from receiving the jab.