No. The symptom is blood clotting, the distribution of the vaccine was only one of many theories for that, it was never observed in RL, and we have a better explanation now.
One theory was that clotting is caused by spike proteins damaging the endothelial cells of the blood vessels. Then there were two theories how vaccines could cause that:
Theory 1.1 was that the vaccine doesn't stay in the muscle. Theory 1.1.1 was that sometimes the needle hits a blood vessel at the bone, but nobody could observe that in RL. Theory 1.1.2 was that the vaccine gets distributed through the lymph system - but the lymphatic system doesn't transport water and nobody could observe that.
Theory 1.2 was that the vaccine stays in the muscle, but that spike proteins leave the site and get distributed in the body. On the first glance, this seems to be unlikely because the antigen presenting cells that produce the spike proteins get eaten by killer cells - and the spike proteins with them. But there is a study where they showed that some of the long-term effects of CV19 can be caused by mobile immune system cells that have eaten up spike proteins without fully digesting them, causing problems when they release them later elsewhere.
The study that has finally found the reason for the blood clotting hasn't found spike proteins, but antibodies instead. This makes sense because the blood clotting is higher at the second jab (meaning that the immune system is already trained to create the dangerous antibodies).
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