There are also theories about suddenly becoming active again after a year and a half of relative lack of exercise, compounded with constant psychological stresses.
I would not be surprised if what Israel sees as a Pfizer issue and the US thinks of as a Moderna issue, an interesting contradiction, that this is what is actually happening. Especially since it seems to be over-represented in young active males.
Heart inflammation is of course also a symptom of COVID, and a much more likely one too.
Israel reports link between rare cases of heart inflammation and COVID-19 vaccination in young men
One in 3000
Thoughts?
I think I had this. I had some weird stabbing top left chest pain after the 2nd dose. I took some ibuprofen randomly a few times for other concerns and that w/ some time it seems to have resolved. In March my doc said side effects would take 4-6 weeks to resolve. For me it was more like 3 months.
Did they test for existence of antibodies before the vaccination?
If the COVID vaccine had a 1 to 10 chance of getting run over by a truck, I’d still take it. There’s a 10 in 10 chance of heart failure from stress eating peanut butter if I had to stay inside for extended periods of time.
I guess this is similar to getting injured by an airbag.
"The mRNA-LNP platform’s lipid nanoparticle component used in preclinical vaccine studies is highly inflammatory" - https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.04.430128v1....
I just took my mother-in-law off of life support last night, after her medical team confirmed she was brain dead.
This was after about 10 days of trying to save her after a sudden cardiac arrest 3 hours after her second vaccine dose.
The team ran numerous tests. Early 60s, healthy, no heart problems. Eventually, they decided that absent any other explanation, they think the vaccine had something to do with it. It's been submitted to VAERS.
The legitimate fear of creating vaccine hesitancy in the population is suppressing reporting on these events. I'm sure they are rare, but I suspect not as rare as we think.