Thursday, 29 February 2024

Pathologists Warn 'Mild Myocarditis' Causes Sudden Deaths in Vaccinated




A group of world-renowned pathologists has just published the results of a peer-reviewed autopsy study that shows sudden deaths among people vaccinated with Covid mRNA shots are being caused by “mild” and undetectable cases of myocarditis.

The paper for the study, conducted by pathologists in Kanazawa City, Japan, was just published by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The Japanese pathologists found that Covid mRNA injections are causing heart damage in people who are unaware of the issue until it is too late.

Myocarditis is inflammation of the heart muscle (myocardium) and it is a known side effect of the Covid shots.

The inflammation can reduce the heart’s ability to pump blood and lead to cardiac arrest, stroke, blood clots, and death.

Most people who suffer from myocarditis are unaware that they have it until they experience symptoms such as critical heart failure.

The Japanese study reports the findings of an autopsy of a healthy 40-year-old man who had died suddenly:

“A healthy 40-year-old Japanese man suddenly experienced tachycardia and lost consciousness two days after vaccination.

“Continued resuscitation recovered the spontaneous heartbeat; however, the patient did not regain consciousness and died nine days later.

“Electrocardiography after resuscitation showed marked ST-segment depression and incomplete right bundle branch block.

“Influenza antigen and polymerase chain reaction tests for SARS-CoV-2 were negative.”

The key findings during the autopsy were:

“At autopsy, several small inflammatory foci with cardiomyocytic necrosis were scattered in the right and left ventricles, with a propensity for the right side.

“Some inflammatory foci were located near the atrioventricular nodes and His bundles.

“The infiltrating cells predominantly consisted of CD68-positive histiocytes, with a small number of CD8-positive and CD4-positive T cells.

“In this case, myocarditis was focal and mild, as is mostly observed following COVID-19 mRNA vaccination.

“However, the inflammatory foci were close to the conduction system and were considered the cause of fatal arrhythmia.”

The most concerning aspect of this is that the myocarditis itself was “focal and mild, as is mostly observed following COVID-19 mRNA vaccination.”

However, this resulted in a fatal arrhythmia because cells which are part of the electrical system were affected.

A secondary concern about this is that since this occurred after the second dose, it seems likely the event happened several years ago, yet has remained unpublished in the meantime.

Experts have long been raising the alarm about the possibility that inflammation affecting just the conductive system might result in fatal arrhythmia as a result of the mRNA injections.

It is to be noted that this man presented suddenly with an arrhythmia (ventricular tachycardia) which ultimately proved fatal; preceding chest pain characteristic of myocarditis was NOT reported.

This is consistent with concerns that subclinical myocarditis does indeed result in an increased risk of fatal arrhythmias, which may be responsible for most or all of the rise in ambulance callouts for cardiac arrests, which we have also written about.

Subclinical myocarditis – defined as a rise in troponin indicative of some cardiac damage – has been found in at least 1 in 50 people injected with the mRNA COVID injection in those studies where they have routinely looked for it.

Finally, it is worth pointing out that the small foci of inflammation affecting the conductive system which have been held responsible for this man’s death were only found by performing cardiac histological examination.

That is NOT something done routinely during post-mortems, not least because it adds extra expense and also postpones the diagnosis.

It is also something pathologists don’t like doing for the sake of the relatives.

In fact, there is generally a massive effort to disincentivize performing advanced testing on tissue.

It is much easier to find some early cardiac atheroma (actually present in many middle-aged individuals) and put the death down to that.

It is, therefore, perfectly possible that inflammation similar to that found in this Japanese man has been missed in the post-mortems carried out on many people dying suddenly.

Moreover, according to British pathologist Dr. Clare Craig, cardiac dissection to the level of detail required in order to ascertain how near these small areas of inflammation might be to the conductive system is a skill all pathologists are trained in.

However, it is one that most “jobbing” pathologists rarely practice, Craig notes.




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