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A newly published study on the relationship between vaccinations and heart muscle inflammation states that after the start of the vaccination campaign against Covid-19, the frequency of myocarditis in the United States increased 223 times, compared to all vaccinations in the last 30 years.
The study is called “Determinants of myocarditis caused by Covid-19 vaccines” (Determinants of COVID-19 vaccine-induced myocarditis) and was published in the scientific journal Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety (Therapeutic advances in drug safety).
The researchers explain the purpose of the study:
“Inflammation of the heart muscle, called myocarditis, has been associated in research with Covid-19 vaccines. After the Covid-19 vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna and Janssen were administered to people in the United States, millions of reported side effects, including myocarditis, using a database called the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (Vaccine adverse event reporting system; VAERS). Such announcements prompted researchers to look more closely, using the VAERS system, at possible links between Covid-19 vaccination and myocarditis.
First, the researchers determined how many myocarditis entries were entered into the VAERS after Covid-19 vaccination and compared it to the ratio of other vaccines to myocarditis over the past three decades. Data for people with post-vaccination myocarditis were adjusted for sex, age, type and number of vaccine doses.
The researchers who conducted the study found that there was a “dramatic” increase in the number of myocarditis reports linked to Covid-19 vaccines in 2021 compared to the 30 years prior to 2021. Inflammation of the heart muscle was cited as side effect of gene therapy for Covid-19 especially among young people and especially among men. Most people who developed myocarditis after being vaccinated against Covid-19 required emergency medical care and/or hospitalization. 92 of them died.
Myocarditis is more likely to affect people after the second dose of the Covid-19 vaccine.
Young people under the age of 30 were more likely to get myocarditis.
The researchers conclude that there is a “strong association” between Covid-19 injections and myocarditis, especially in children and young adults. Researchers say the link between Covid-19 vaccines and heart muscle inflammation needs further investigation to determine how safe the use of such vaccines is across all age groups.”
More specifically, the researchers write:
“We found that myocarditis notifications in the VAERS database increased 233-fold in 2021 after Covid-19 vaccination compared to the average for all vaccines over the past thirty years. This number represents a 2,500% increase in absolute numbers in the year of the first vaccination campaign compared to historical values prior to 2021.
Demographic data showed that the majority of myocarditis cases occurred in young people (50%) and men (69%). 76% of cases required emergency medical care and hospitalization. Of all reports of myocarditis, 92 people (3%) died. People were more likely to develop myocarditis after the second injection (p < 0.00001) and people under 30 were more likely to develop myocarditis than people over 30 (p < 0.00001)."
The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which administers VAERS, writes on a page explaining the contents of the database that only a very small percentage of actual vaccine adverse events end up there.
Myocarditis is difficult to detect in humans because it has no disease-specific symptoms.
The heart is the only human organ with a limited capacity for regeneration. Adult heart cells do not regenerate.
By Karol Kallas
2024-01-29 07:13:03
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