That's what they said. Myocarditis does damage, but you can treat and cure the condition; you can't heal the damage it has already dealt.
Myocarditis is inflammation. You can bring down inflammation (cure it). But the damage will remain, weakening your heart and amplifying further damage taken in the future.
I don't think that is true. My husband had two heart attacks twenty years apart with one stent and one bypass. His heart today has a normal ejection fraction for his age. His valves are all normal. He does have minor thickening. His heart was not good at all 2 years ago. Maybe the ivermectin for his two bouts of COVID cured him.
He was also told 20 years ago that he was in heart failure. He wasn't. It was a reaction to a diabetic drug the hospital started him on.
Neural pathways are rerouted. So they can learn to do things again. But the nerves that carried the signals are gone. What was damaged, will not regeneratet. The person may re-learn; but that is the amazing part of a neural design
It is incurable, right? Is there any real treatment for it?
Myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) itself is treatable and curable, but the damage it does before it's diagnosed is permanent.
I heard a doctor say it is not curable but there is treatments and you life expectancy is 5 - 10 years.
That's what they said. Myocarditis does damage, but you can treat and cure the condition; you can't heal the damage it has already dealt.
Myocarditis is inflammation. You can bring down inflammation (cure it). But the damage will remain, weakening your heart and amplifying further damage taken in the future.
That’s incorrect. Many cases are treatable and you can continue to live a full life afterwards
A few organs in our body do not heal. Heart, brain and spine are examples
I don't think that is true. My husband had two heart attacks twenty years apart with one stent and one bypass. His heart today has a normal ejection fraction for his age. His valves are all normal. He does have minor thickening. His heart was not good at all 2 years ago. Maybe the ivermectin for his two bouts of COVID cured him. He was also told 20 years ago that he was in heart failure. He wasn't. It was a reaction to a diabetic drug the hospital started him on.
This isn’t true, the brain can heal. Brain lesions can heal, I’ve known people whose MRIs proved it.
Neural pathways are rerouted. So they can learn to do things again. But the nerves that carried the signals are gone. What was damaged, will not regeneratet. The person may re-learn; but that is the amazing part of a neural design