The Curse of Vikings and Sclerosis Multiple

Multiple sclerosis is an inflammatory disease that affects the central nervous system and that essentially has the destruction of myelin layers. Normally the disease appears in people 20 years of age 40 who are genetically predisposed. The oldest description of a multiple sclerosis patient appears in the old book of San Torlak (1133-1193), the saint [...]
The Viking curse.
Through epidemiology, experts try to identify the causes of the disease. The disease has a rather special epidemiology. Rysk to suffer from this disease is linked to ground parallels, so the frequency of this disease in equatorial regions is few, for example, that Ethiopians do not suffer from this disease. The infection grows progressively, the closer we get to the poles, and the more frequently it is to places that have geographic positions between 40 and 60 degrees [40 and 60 degrees wide] in both the Northern and the Southern Hemisphere. However, countries with the same width as the United Kingdom and Japan have different privacys. Charles Poser, an American scientist, linked this disease to Viking conquests and the migrations of these warriors. These warriors not only destroyed the shores of Western Europe but also left the curse of Odin of their immunological system: “Delenda est mielina” Destroy myelin. The most affected countries of this disease are Scandinavian countries, Iceland and the United Kingdom, where there has certainly been a Viking presence, as well as Anglo-Sanction colonies ( U n SA, Austal, Canada, New Zealand. In Europe the average is 83 cases of 100,000 people, a low figure compared to 150 per 100,000 in Nordic countries. The highest rate is found in the Orada Archipelago in northern Scotland with 402 cases of 100,000 people. If we go to the Mediterranean, there's twice as much of this rate on the island of Sardinia as in all of Italy, that's because the sardinians have suffered Viking conquests and the curse of Odin more than the rest of the peninsula.
Vikings in the Middle East.
Israelis, Palestinians, Jordanians, and Kuwaitis live nearby, yet the risk of having multiplete skelose is different. For each sick owl, there are two Jordanians and four Palestinians with this disease. The Israelites have the lowest record. Again this variable owes the Vikings. Apart from their trips across the Atlantic, they made their way east following the canal (Dniper, Volga) route and settled on trade routes of both the Black and the Caspian. We know from the middle of the 20th century, they arrived in Baghdad and attacked Constantinople. Likely, they enslaved and sold the women and children they had captured to transmit genes to Odin's curse. / world.al












