Anecdote here: just today my neighbor had a heart attack. He's like 46, clean living Christian drinks occasionally. He is one of the fittest men i know, always doing volunteer handy work for neighborhood grannies and shit. His day job is in health care though. In sure he is jabbed.
Then we had a lil party tonight and met some new people. Friends bf im just meeting says a 21 year old guy at his job, athletic, just died at work today.
Last weekend a different neighbor had a heart attack. Saw the ambo and the followup cardio car on their doorstep, saw him out flat on the porch.
I can't believe! This is happening. It's incredible. I have been kinda skeptical of vaccine injury as i was of covid death but it's just piling on around me.
Can people take anything immediately to reduce damage? Aspirin for instance?
That's a great question - Aspirin and Heart Attack
Aspirin can help prevent heart attacks in people with coronary artery disease and in those who have a higher than average risk. Only low dose 81 mg (Baby Aspirin), usually just 1 a day, is needed.
But people who think they may be having an attack need an extra 325 mg of aspirin, and they need it as quickly as possible. For the best results, chew a single full-sized 325-mg tablet, but don't use an enteric-coated tablet, which will act slowly even if chewed. And don't forget to call 911, then your doctor. https://www.health.harvard.edu/heart-health/aspirin-for-heart-attack-chew-or-swallow
The Covid jab is very new. I don't know if Cardiologists have any guidelines for that. FIRST they must accept the fact the Covid-19 jabs lead to heart problems.
Heart pain could also be due to Myocarditis or Pericarditis and would have a different treatment.
Thank you fren! I don't have any aspirin. I should get some for the vaxxed around me,
You're welcome, fren. Made me realize I should have some for the house too!
Only if they are conscious.
I think there was something wonderful beyond clotbusters that heart attack and stroke patients could take via iv to help prevent damage. Maybe it was an oxygen carrier or other metabolic pathway promotor.
I just can't remember.
edit: Maybe something along these lines;
Methylene blue https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27042692/