I was watching a Dr Drew episode the other day, the reason given for all the a-fib is the sequela of myocarditis. I have been wondering why all these patients, I code their charts, are coming in with new-onset paroxysmal atrial fib. I knew it was related to the jab but didn't know the mechanism. It's due to heart damage from the jab. So I believe this headline. I mean there was afib before the jabs but the amount has exploded since the jabs started.
Makes total sense. If you're inflamming the heart in this shotgun-style approach by exposing all of its cells to a pro-inflammatory spike protein, it stands to reason it's going to mess with electrical conductivity in the atria and ventricles that allow the chambers to contract in a coordinated fashion. Once they desynchronize because the cells are damaged and not conducting signals appropriately, we'd expect to fibrillation.
On the plus side, mild a-fib can often be minimally symptomatic and not much of an impairment, but if you're 20 and now have to deal with that as a core limitation on your physical activity for the rest of your life, it's still a worry that'll always be there in the back of your mind that should not be, even in the "best case" scenario.
I guess I'll have to dig and see if I can find the original research that shows this. Dr. Pinskey has enough integrity to medical practice to back up what he says with data, so there has to be a study, even though I haven't seen it, or he would not have made the claim and brought the wrath of Pfizer on himself.
I was watching a Dr Drew episode the other day, the reason given for all the a-fib is the sequela of myocarditis. I have been wondering why all these patients, I code their charts, are coming in with new-onset paroxysmal atrial fib. I knew it was related to the jab but didn't know the mechanism. It's due to heart damage from the jab. So I believe this headline. I mean there was afib before the jabs but the amount has exploded since the jabs started.
Makes total sense. If you're inflamming the heart in this shotgun-style approach by exposing all of its cells to a pro-inflammatory spike protein, it stands to reason it's going to mess with electrical conductivity in the atria and ventricles that allow the chambers to contract in a coordinated fashion. Once they desynchronize because the cells are damaged and not conducting signals appropriately, we'd expect to fibrillation.
On the plus side, mild a-fib can often be minimally symptomatic and not much of an impairment, but if you're 20 and now have to deal with that as a core limitation on your physical activity for the rest of your life, it's still a worry that'll always be there in the back of your mind that should not be, even in the "best case" scenario.
I guess I'll have to dig and see if I can find the original research that shows this. Dr. Pinskey has enough integrity to medical practice to back up what he says with data, so there has to be a study, even though I haven't seen it, or he would not have made the claim and brought the wrath of Pfizer on himself.