Did you pour it while it was still hot?
What whirlfloc does is coagulate proteins. When small bits become bigger bits, they drop to the bottom (given enough time) so you can gently transfer and leave them behind. If you neither allowed time, nor transferred gently then all the proteins the whirlfloc started coagulating have also been transferred.
To answer your question - it's not stuffed in the way dropping a bucket of lead or glass fragments would be.
It will make beer and beer that may taste great. There are some people who belive that (despite fairly well documented evidence to the contrary) that those proteins cause no harm. They can and will cause harm to beer flavour and stability and have no positive effect that suggests thwy are worth having.
Now that they are there in your beer, go ahead and ferment, condition, package and drink.
Even if you notice nothing negative, make an effort next time to separate and leave behind. Easily done and the main point of whirlfloc and similar kettle finings is to facilitate just that.
Also pouring hot wort (again some believe differently) is better avoided - let it cool (either quickly or slowly but hygenically), then transfer.
If you allowed hot protein to settle, then transferred gently, then cooled, you may get eggy debris from cold break proteins. These are nowhere near as deleterious as hot break protein and I wouldn't worry.