https://twitter.com/WallStreetApes/status/1747353328550568316 or you can try https://nitter.net/WallStreetApes/status/1747353328550568316
Could This Disease X The WEF Is Preparing For? 🚨🚨
Miami Hospital Rooms Are Seeing New Disease That Affects All Ages, Displays “All flu symptoms & swelling in their legs, water in their lungs, fluid in their heart, etc”
“They’re keeping it from the news, they don’t want you to know what’s really going on”
“Listen to this Nurses firsthand account of what she's seeing in Miami area hospital emergency rooms right now.
So the news is not talking about this, but there is something going around. Something else that they infected us with, and it's not COVID. It's not the flu. It's not RSV. All all the typical cold symptoms, sore throat, body aches, fever, cough, congestion, etcetera.
But when they come in to the ER, they have swelling in their legs, um, water in their lungs, fluid in their heart, etcetera. And we're talking people of all ages, including very young people. But they don't want you to know what's really going on, so they're not putting it in the news. I'm telling you, the entire ER where I work at is so full to capacity.
A number of people will send me this and other videos asking what's going on. I am going to investigate and find out, but meanwhile, anyone that has any information, please comment below so we all stay informed as community”
Consider the following as possible manifestations of these symptoms: Pericarditis, Pulmonary Edema, Pneumonia, Congestive heart failure, and Dropsy come to mind.
Frequently, the cause of pericarditis is unknown or idiopathic, though it often occurs after a viral infection. It is most often acute, meaning that it comes on suddenly and doesn’t last long, from just a few days to a few weeks.
Most people diagnosed with pericarditis will recover after one acute episode without hospitalization. Approximately 15-30% of those diagnosed will face complicated or recurrent pericarditis.
Pulmonary Edema: [fluid in the lungs] - Pulmonary edema is a condition in which too much fluid accumulates in the lungs, interfering with a person's ability to breathe normally. The problem is usually related to heart disease [congestive heart failure], but it has other possible causes, including kidney failure, blood transfusion reactions, or travel to destinations at high elevation.
Pneumonia: Pneumonia is an infection of the lungs that may be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi. The infection causes the lungs' air sacs (alveoli) to become inflamed and fill up with fluid or pus. That can make it hard for the oxygen you breathe in to get into your bloodstream.
Dropsy: [fluid under the skin] - What is Dropsy called today? 'Dropsy' refers to swelling under the skin, and is generally known today as 'oedema' or 'edema'. In edema, the area under the skin (the interstitium) fills with fluid. It is normal for fluid to be secreted into the interstitium. Since the mid-nineteenth century, dropsy has been recognized as a sign of underlying disease of the heart, liver, or kidneys, or of malnutrition.