Audio By Carbonatix
A 62-year-old man from Germany has, against medical advice, been vaccinated 217 times against Covid, doctors report.
The bizarre case is documented in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.
The shots were bought and given privately within the space of 29 months.
The man appears to have suffered no ill effects, researchers from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg say.
'Very interested'
"We learned about his case via newspaper articles," Dr Kilian Schober, from the university's microbiology department, said.
"We then contacted him and invited him to undergo various tests in Erlangen. He was very interested in doing so."
The man provided fresh blood and saliva samples.
The researchers also tested some frozen blood samples of his that had been stored in recent years.
Dr Schober said: "We were able to take blood samples ourselves when the man received a further vaccination during the study at his own insistence.
"We were able to use these samples to determine exactly how the immune system reacts to the vaccination."
Evidence for 130 of the jabs was collected by the public prosecutor of the city of Magdeburg, who opened an investigation with the allegation of fraud, but no criminal charges were brought.
Covid vaccines cannot cause infection but can teach the body how to fight the disease.
Immune system
Messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccines work by showing the body's cells a bit of genetic code from the virus.
The immune system should then recognise and know how to fight Covid should they encounter it for real.
Dr Schober worried hyper-stimulating the immune system with repeated doses might have fatigued certain cells.
But the researchers found no evidence of this in the 62-year-old.
And there was no sign that he had ever been infected with Covid.
'Favoured approach'
The researchers said: "Importantly, we do not endorse hyper-vaccination as a strategy to enhance adaptive immunity."
And the results of their tests on the 62-year-old were insufficient for making far-reaching conclusions, let alone recommendations for the general public.
"Current research indicates that a three-dose vaccination, coupled with regular top-up vaccines for vulnerable groups, remains the favoured approach," they say on the university's website.
"There is no indication that more vaccines are required."
The NHS says Covid vaccines are normally given seasonally but some people with a severely weakened immune system may need additional protection at other times - and it will contact those whose NHS record suggests may be eligible.
Covid vaccines can have side effects. A common one is a sore arm from the injection.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana at the World Cup: How football builds national brand identity beyond the pitch
38 minutes -
SSNIT considers leasing loss-making hotels as turnaround plan takes shape
2 hours -
2026 World Cup: ‘We battled like warriors’ and won ‘with our brains’ – Queiroz opens up on Ghana’s victory
2 hours -
Ruto invites Arsenal after Kenyan fans celebrate title win
2 hours -
Oil slips again as US, Iran sign peace deal
2 hours -
Driver, passenger escape unhurt after tree falls on taxi at Golf Hills
2 hours -
We’re fully prepared and determined to secure victory – Black Stars assure Mahama
2 hours -
2026 World Cup: Late Yirenkyi strike gives Ghana victory over Panama in opener
3 hours -
Passport ‘mega queue’ strands Ryanair passengers
4 hours -
Harry and Meghan to bring children to UK next month
4 hours -
Trump says he will visit India as frosty relationship with Modi thaws
4 hours -
‘Get him out of here’: Judge sends Gilgo Beach killer to prison for rest of life
4 hours -
ChatGPT can be made to generate sexualised and violent images, researchers find
4 hours -
Japan raids ice cream giants over price-fixing allegations
5 hours -
Ex-Nigeria oil minister cleared in UK bribery trial
5 hours