Coded a chart of a 20 something that was having symptoms, cannot remember what they are now but the patient had the jabs a few months prior. They didn't find the cause of the symptoms but the d dimer was elevated. Thinking to myself, yep, the patient has microclotting, sad.
I recall someone who got the vaxx telling me they weren't allowed to exercise vigorously for 2 weeks. It never made sense to me then, but makes more sense now if you're micro-clotting your blood vessels.
I'm guessing flying at high altitudes means you have trouble absorbing oxygen better.
Pilots are advised not to fly for two to three days? It ought to be at least 2 weeks.
Two to three lifetimes.
elevated d-dimers (a measure of micro clotting) can persist for 60 days.
three friends of my parents had strokes in September. two died. both in their 70s. vaccinated 4 months ago.
Coded a chart of a 20 something that was having symptoms, cannot remember what they are now but the patient had the jabs a few months prior. They didn't find the cause of the symptoms but the d dimer was elevated. Thinking to myself, yep, the patient has microclotting, sad.
That’s why they are going against aspirin now, because it thins out the blood.
Exactly.
Saw a chart showing that post-vaccination death rates don't return to normal until after 40 days.
I recall someone who got the vaxx telling me they weren't allowed to exercise vigorously for 2 weeks. It never made sense to me then, but makes more sense now if you're micro-clotting your blood vessels.
I'm guessing flying at high altitudes means you have trouble absorbing oxygen better.
Plus sitting for long hours isn't good, either.
My understanding of vigorous is like sprinting and long distance marathons. Things that make your heart work hard. Walking doesn't seem strenuous.
Did you get the jab within the last 2 weeks? Otherwise you wouldn't need to worry.
Edit: actually, if you got the jab, I would be worried and monitor health symptoms