https://twitter.com/_aussie17/status/1610221042286628865
If you are not following the twatter threads of Aussie_17, you are missing out on some very good information. He is an ex big pharma executive turned whistleblower, exposing the evil practices of big pharma from the inside.
I didn't realize chance of death increases by 10% each year with myocarditis. 1 out of 29 Thai boys showed signs. I'd like to extrapolate that across the US population. It's going to add up to a lot of deaths over the next 5 years from myocarditis alone.
There are some fucktards in this thread that are saying myocarditis is "self resolving" and not that serious, blah blah blah. They might be shills, or they might just be stupid. Whichever. I don't care.
Their argument is not with ME. I did not do any of the medical research, I just reported it as is, starting with the big pharma whistleblower, Aussie_17 as a source.
The fucktards can go ahead and debunk Aussie_17 if they want. Knock yourselves out. If they want to debunk the medical research about myocarditis life expectancy, go right ahead. Neither one has anything to do with me personally.
For anyone else that is interested, myocarditis inflammation causes damage to the heart muscle. That damage does not heal (the heart cannot regenerate). Instead, it turns into scar tissue.
The scar tissue messes up the electrical signals that cause the heart contractions that move blood through the body. These messed up signals from the scar tissue is what eventually causes a heart attack of one type or another. That is what proves to be fatal, and it is just a matter of time until it happens.
Statistically, the odds of this happening increase by about 10 percent per year. Deal with it. Once again, those statistics have nothing to do with me personally - so if anyone does not like that information, they can go fuck themselves. Argue with the people that produced that data and the statistics... not me.
A quick read from Mayo clinic says that (mild) myocarditis can go away but more severe cases can cause permanenent heart damage. As Aussie_17 said, the myocarditis may not present any symptoms until it does. By then, the issues are probably severe. As someone who had a heart attack (mild) at 52, I can tell you, it's a life changer. I took it as a sign and made all sorts of life changes and am in the best shape of my life since I was in my 20s. Other guys I know who had the same thing happen are still on the same glide slope to an early death. I wouldn't want to be in my 20s facing a lifetime of potential heart problems.