ECG/EKG Versus Smartwatch for Myocarditis/Pericarditis and Myocardial Infarction
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 ธ.ค. 2024
- Roger Seheult, MD of MedCram explains why a smartwatch might not be enough to differentiate between myocarditis/pericarditis, and myocardial infarction. See all Dr. Seheult's videos at: www.medcram.co...
(This video was recorded on March 8, 2023)
Roger Seheult, MD is the co-founder and lead professor at www.medcram.co...
He is Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Disease, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine and an Associate Professor at the University of California, Riverside School of Medicine.
LINKS / REFERENCES:
ECG Watch: How it Works (MedCram) | • ECG Watch: How it Work...
MedCram helps out Cambodia with Alliance for International Medicine update (MedCram) | blog.medcram.c...
Working to alleviate suffering (AIM) | www.alliancein...
Pericardial effusion with tamponade (Wikimedia) | commons.wikime...
Evol Of MI (Wikimedia) | commons.wikime...
PericarditisMyocarditis (Wikimedia) | commons.wikime...
Inferior and RtV MI 12 lead (Wikimedia) | commons.wikime...
ECG / EKG Interpretation Explained Clearly (MedCram) | www.medcram.co...
Ultrasound Collection (MedCram) | www.medcram.co...
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#ECG #myocarditis #myocardialinfarction
For the EKG course please visit us at www.medcram.com/courses/ekg-ecg-interpretation-explained-clearly
Being a non-medical person, I wish I could afford your courses just because I love learning. Nevertheless I am pleased you have these courses. And thanks for all the updates you have done on covid; the updates have really help me cut through a lot of the nonsense.
This is really the major source of our income. We would rather fund our channel from healthcare providers than from pharmaceutical companies. Thanks for your support.
Me too. No medical knowledge but can understand the explanations here
Since I am in my mid eighties I cannot hope to complete any of your valuable courses. These on the Covid Pandemic have been excellent in everyway. I'm signing off. now with very Best Wishes. I shall continue to recommend your channel where I can. in news media comments on line.
The book by Dr. Dubin, "Rapid Interpretation of EKG's" is an excellent, easy to understand book.
@@Medcram Amen to that! If anything Covid proved how current system DOESN'T work. AT ALL.
Good that experienced medical practioners are providing educational videos that are aimed at the general public whilst also offering paid courses for professionals. Much appreciated by this subscriber.
I love the progression! You all are doing great work!
I have just been diagnosed with Afib and this is interesting. I have an Apple smart watch and use that ECG feature all the time. I am glad to see how this feature works. I am apparently in Afib all the time. Am on medication for it and will be getting my heart converted soon.
My dad had pericarditis, mostly from overwork & stress in his 40s...he tried to take good care of himself and lived to 80, so I guess he did a pretty good job. ;*[}
We find these videos informative. Keep up the good work.
Thank you my plan is to hopefully invest more in your course once i start working. Im definitely spreading the word.
Looked at this video as my husband is in heart failure and was curious whether an Apple Watch would be a useful monitoring tool in between visits to the cardiologist. Haven’t decided yet, will check with said cardiologist. But, I am AMAZED at how clearly Dr. Seheult explains the basics of understanding an ECG. Thank you so much!
I have the 6 lead Kardia mobile device. I paid $130 for the advanced 6 lead (they have a 1 lead unit) but was dismayed that in order to "unlock" the advanced analytics that the 6 lead provides, I have to pay an additional $10 per month. I think that's a little underhanded but after I simmered down, I decided that the "all in" cost is still reasonable for having a 6 lead device at hand as opposed to a single lead like an Apple Watch. I definitely recommend it for the peace of mind it provides and the alert to go to the DR if necessary. It isn't continuous like the Apple Watch, but it is easy to do and it takes 30 seconds for a reading. I think it would be superior to a device that is continuous but of little practical value.
I had went to the hospital a couple times when I was having strange heartbeats but by the time I got there the event was over both times and could not be diagnosed. I bought the Kardia mobile and found I had PVC. It helped because I could pull it out and measure the event well it was happening. I showed my DR and he put me on a monitor overnight to confirm.
Kardia is a great product I've owned it for > 3 years. I've gotten Afib a few times since 2019. It's great because I can show my doctor a medical grade trace.
I was tempted to purchase one right away however according to Google information as follow :
Is KardiaMobile Covered by Medicare? KardiaMobile products are not currently covered by insurance, including Medicare. However, they can be paid for using a Flexible Spending Account (FSA), Health Savings Account (HSA) or Health Reimbursement Account (HRA).
@@gate-gate6863 Yeah but it's not expensive for what it does. I'm not rich but I can certainly pay $130 for a six lead EKG (plus $10 per month for the advanced analytics).
Last summer I experienced frequent PACs and PVCs. It was detected during a routine EKG and confirmed by a treadmill stress test. I purchased the K 6 lead and used it to try to identify the cause. The K device detected the same arrhythmias and they were a daily occurrence. At the same time a DR of Nursing friend said the first approach is to increase electrolytes. I started drinking daily sports drinks with an additional pinch of potassium (just a pinch of salt substitute). I may have been dehydrated as well. So, my PACs and PVC stopped and I haven't had an arrhythmia since September. I check my heart at least once a day. To me, it's well worth the money for the peace of mind. I've stopped the daily sports drinks but I try to stay hydrated and I'll go back to electrolytes if I experience arrhythmias again.
@@bill9989 Thank you very much for sharing your precious experience. I do have atrium tachycardia(Zio patch one week )and persistent dizziness for over 10 years. I will definitely look into getting one. Before doing that I will be even more consciously drinking more water!
@Betty Amber In my case it was stress related and I wasn't getting any sleep. We had a very ill family member and it took too much out of me.
A heartbroken family are mourning the loss of two sisters who died suddenly. Shaunie Thomson, 26, and Shavanna Thomson, 21, died three weeks apart.
I love these med cram so much! I learn so much!
Thanks!
Excellent brief ECG synopsis Doc! Having personally experienced an MI, I can really relate to this topic. I would recommend that any health care professional not familiar with ECG's sign up for this course.
This video is a excellent explanation of what a 12-lead EKG can do in contrast to a smartwatch serving as a two-lead EKG. But unfortunately it fails to tell us what a smartwatch *cannot do* from the perspective of a wearer. I'm left with questions. Will a smartwatch *always* tell us when something is wrong, so we can go to a specialist for a precise diagnosis? If that's true, then all is well and good. But are there also heart problems that it cannot spot? If so, what are those problems and their symptoms so we can seek medical assistance even absent a smartwatch alert? That distinction has been my concern since smartphones first began offering these features.
I think he tells it clearly from 3:00 to 6:00 that the watch can't check many areas of the heart if the damage is localized in those areas.
This is good basic facts, for none medical person
I just got a catherization can you make a video on how accurate it is and what does the test tell the doctor ? Love your videos doctor.
How about touching your toe to the watch?
Or taking the watch off your arm and placing it on the chest to get different readings?
Will you do a video about the Cochrane Mask Study?
I have the Apple Watch and I’ve always wondered how to interpret the ecg. If there’s more on this topic hope you can post it.
An easy workaround to get additional ECG data out of your smartwatch, it to move it from your left wrist to your left ankle, and then record your ECG by touching the crown first with a dinner of your left hand and next with a finger of your right hand.
A better option is to connect a set of Bluetooth enabled sensors to the watch and record your ECG from multiple loads simultaneously.
Doc you should do a video on the ERYTHRITOL heart attack scare ,deception and why.
That study is based on very low evidence.
Dr. Gil Carvalho (Nutrition Made Simple) had a good video about that study.
Answer at 10:38
Excellent overview
The obvious solution is to get a system where you can connect the watch to other sensors via Bluetooth. I don't know if there is enough commercial demand for that but itd be a heck of a lot more convenient and comfortable the most halters
Thank you. Very helpful
can you just replace the watch position to your lower leg and touch it with your right and left hand to have 2 more references?
Great info. Any thoughts on the KardiaMobile 6-Lead Personal EKG Monitor that I've been using?
What is the lead equivalent for chest heart rate monitor straps?
E.g. the Polar H10 provides ECG data at 130Hz sampling rate. This would measured at two points just below (usually) the left breast. There are other similar products, e.g. Movesense which can sample at 100, 250 and 500 Hz, measured at the same location.
These are widely used in (for example) cycling and running. And appear to be more reliable for measuring (for example) heart rate and RR Intervals than wrist or arm based heart rate monitors.
More common nowadays eh?
Medcram never disappoints! Always inspiring and rich with knowledge ❤. I couldn’t have gotten a better explanation 💕. Thank you Dr Seheult🙏
Can you do a follow up on this subject? So much noise about Covid vaccines related death
That's not a bad price! ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) costs $275 where I live and you only get a minimal amount of EKG education. It's still $175 to recertify in ACLS (a much shorter course). Most companies have moved to online virtual ACLS certification and those courses are trash.
Doesn't your employer pay for ACLS recertification?
@@yasmine4754 My employer pays for the online virtual crap course. You can pause the computer during the megacode and look up the next action. 🙄There is a nearby company that teaches it in person.
A heartbroken family has paid tribute to their 'beautiful' daughter after she collapsed and died suddenly in her dad's arms.
20-year-old Libbey Peverall was not known to have underlying health conditions when she suddenly passed away at her family home on 20 February. I read somewhere she had a heart attack. Baffled for sure
Moderna CEO tells Sen. Rand Paul that they paid the NIH $400M in royalties last year. Rog, would that be a conflict of interest for the same govt employees profiting from the vaccine to also be dictating the policy about how many times we take vaccine?
Seems that a smart watch is good for detecting that _something_ is wrong. Then if you get alerted by that, you'd get an ECG/EKG to find out more specifically what is wrong.
I think he means you could have things wrong and not know it using the watch, but if the watch does detect a problem within it's ability, then it can be useful. ie: it's a help, but it's no replacement for regular EKG with stress test.
@@rcmrcm3370 I thought he was saying you could tell something was wrong, but couldn't distinguish between pericarditis and a myocardial infarction. Although I think you're right that some myocardial infarctions wouldn't show up on the watch ECG/EKG because they happened in a part of the heart that wasn't being monitored.
Rog are lipid nanoparticles safe or toxic? looking forward to hearing and documenting your response.
thank you
Have you done your full and comprehensive due diligence before you recommended this countermeasure prototype
See all of our videos. We have retracted nine of them. They all speak for themselves.
@@Medcram what does that say about ur incompetence as a doctor and common sense that you had to retract nine of your videos? I could’ve told you over two years ago the truth about these injections. On your retracted videos where were you getting your information from? How could you have been so wrong? Again nine videos you took down where is your common sense? I’m speechless. Your pathetic. How many people were injured or died because of your lack of incompetence
You’re a doctor you’re supposed to do homework
Your “excess deaths” video You should be stating that the injections should be at least at the very least be investigated
On March 4, Spc. Jaykob R. Pruitt, 19, from Bennington, Oklahoma, collapsed and died after completing the two-mile run portion of the Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT).
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
@@Medcram EIGHT YEAR OLD STUDY!!!
@@rightlyso8507 rog keeps responding with the same thing everytime i post that another young person has had collapsed and died. I wonder, incentives or ignorance
If according to your ecg lecture, SVT can be caused by stress/epinephrine, why is it even considered pathological?
“Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT) is a relatively common cardiac dysrhythmia.' It is as likely to occur in people with apparently normal hearts, as in those with diseased hearts”
“Nervousness and anxiety are known factors in initiating an episode of PSVT.3”
Anaesthetic considerations in patients with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, 1984
Because it can cause problems if persistent
is sensor belt Polar H10 equally useless for ECG as a smartwatch?
My Apple watch tends to show a wonky rhythm the first second. I'm guessing that first second just isn't accurate as it's adjusting and just starting the recording.
21-Year-Old MMA Fighter Isaiah Abels Suffers a Cardiac Arrest During Fight
Earlier this month, a young fighter suffered a medical emergency during a fight at The Coliseum in downtown Evansville, Indiana.
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
The covid vaccine is known to cause myocarditis , Thanks, this video is very timely and relevant…
Historically, postvaccination myocarditis has been reported as a rare adverse event after vaccinations, especially smallpox, influenza, and hepatitis B.
@@gribbler1695 NONSENSE Never heard this before.. ONLY the Covid shot causes this the CDC's VAERS proves it but they never analyze it
Covid infection is known to cause a wide variety of cardiac problems including myocarditis.
Any advantage of Kardiamobile Personal EKG which uses fingers from both hands?
I mean as a non-medical person who does go in for regular checkup including EKG, and just wants something to help monitor the time in between for the unexpected.
Goner need way more of these in the coming months
Cardiotouch on phone?
I discovered a bigger problem with EKG watches. I got a Fitbit with EKG due to suspected covid damage. Coincident with sudden weakness, several times over a few months, the EKG showed clearly abnormal rhythms and Fitbit called it equivocal. Brought the printouts to my PCP and she says she can't use it because she's not a cardiologist. She can't refer me to a cardiologist because it's "just a watch". The best tool would be a multi-month Holter monitor but that would need to be prescribed by a cardiologist and there's 'no evidence' I need one.
My best bet seems to be to hire an Indian cardiologist online and go from there.
Just typing this out in case anybody is thinking of buying one and expects things to go differently. And maybe your PCP isn't terrible and it will.
I don't know if it's good or bad, but my PCP will give me any test or refer me to any doctor I ask him to.
That sounds like you need a new primary. Didn't she do an EKG on you in the office? From your avatar, you appear younger than me (by far). I just decided on my own that, at my age, I'd like to have a cardiologist. My primary agreed. Other than reasonable co-pays, I just see him every year in addition to my primary. So I get 2 EKG's per year.
But let me give some other advice. I've commented to several others here about my Kardia Mobile 6 lead device. I don't want anybody to think I am shilling for the company. I am not but I think it may be a good option for you. I chose the more advanced 6 lead and it was about $130. The company is a little shady in that they require an additional monthly fee of $10 to "unlock" its advanced features (so why the hell did I pay extra for the 6 lead unit?). Nevertheless, the all in cost is still ok with me. One feature of the unit (plus the monthly) is you get 4 annual reviews by their cardiologists. You select the reading and send it in through the app. The company also has a cheaper 1 lead unit but from what Dr Seheult says, 1 lead isn't enough.
Please find a new primary Dr who will refer you to specialists. Especially since COVID , it is important to have cardiac testing done if You believe you need it. She should not be an obstacle. Good luck.
@@Bob_Adkins yes, that's the way it should be.
Since you're talking about myocarditis, are you still recommending the jab?
😂😂 why everybody’s had it or had a preventative supposed prevented him. I still think there’s confounding that variables with the evidence that is supposedly worked in the beginning.!!!! seems like a joke direct meant something that’s obsolete
I bet your comment is deleted. Doc does not like to ever say he was wrong; never.
@@1010uswork Maybe he's thinking of a response?
South African Footballer Siphamandla Mtolo Dead at 29 After Collapsing in Training
Can I touch the watch near my belly button to get a different angle on the heart? And then switch the watch to my other wrist and hold to the belly button to get a third angle? If a hospital is not available, could that slow-motion “3-lead” view of the heart be helpful?
Creative. Yes. It’s possible theoretically
@@Medcram If the system had artificial intelligence trained on a massive # of ECGs, is it likely a community health worker could have a "$100 ECG" that makes rough diagnoses? I work on health in poor nations, so ECGs and cardiologists are usually not available.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but does this mean that an Apple Watch with the EKG can reliably detect that SOMETHING is going on in terms of inflammation of the heart?
Not reliably. However, things like atrial fibrillation it does a better job of because that shows up in all leads.
Were you aware that because it is under emergency use they did not have to test the product Like they would have had to under normal circumstances?
www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/you-asked-we-answered-are-pfizers-comirnaty-and-biontech-covid-19-vaccines-the-same-or-different
Interesting how these clinical descriptions will relate to the excess spike protein cells being found in the blood stream of mRNA vaccine recipients.
First Dates star Jordan Dunbar dies aged 29 as devastated family pays tribute
Why is myocarditis so mainstream these days?
Scientists are baffled
@@Etaoinshrdlu69 Common sense tells you.. WHy it happened after the SHOT?
@@jerseytony1 there is a reason why "common sense" isn't used as medical evidence. You have no idea what you're talking about and don't know what you don't know. The risk of myocarditis is far higher in the unvaccinated than vaccinated. Covid infection produces myocarditis at a far higher rate (along with other negative outcomes including death) than vaccination. The numbers are well understood. People like you just have no interest in actual medical research and facts. You have an ignorant agenda that, if followed, will harm people's health. Until you get an actual education, please keep your uniformed opinions to yourself. Thanks!
On Thursday Ben Siegfried, one of the St. Louis Battlehawks’ training staff members DIED suddenly at the team hotel.
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
Quick - read the response below ... some sort of "study" from long before the poy-zun was inflicted on folks. Yeah, that's pretty ... conclusive?
@@forevertoons9022 rog keeps responding with the same thing everytime i post that another young person has had collapsed and died. I wonder, incentives or ignorance
Hey - quick question. I am having a routine echo next week as follow-up to my pulmonary hypertension (40/25 by RHC) . The cardiac office has ordered this as a "limited" echo. I wold like to know what the difference on the report will be having a "limited" rather than full echo. From the reading I have been doing, I am assuming it is only being limited in order to squeeze more patients into a day. My feeling is if the insurance is going to be billed same as a complete, then I should be having a complete (assuming that may be the case). Should I be concerned over this or let it go???
They are doing the echo to check the pulmonary artery pressure only. They’re probably not going to be looking at all of the other aspects of the heart which they already have from the previous echo, and which take more time to do. It’s probably OK.
@@Medcram Thank you for taking the time to answer - appreciate it.
So is the data from the watch essentially worthless?
No. It does a good job of picking up afib
@@Medcram Thank You for clarifying.
Peter Baddoo, an instructor in the Department of Mathematics, passed away suddenly on Feb. 15 while playing basketball on campus.
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
@@Medcram Peter Baddoo, an instructor in the Department of Mathematics, passed away suddenly on Feb. 15 while playing basketball on campus.
@@Medcram Peter Baddoo, an instructor in the Department of Mathematics, passed away suddenly on Feb. 15 while playing basketball on campus.
@@Medcram u use this as a shield as if it even works. Why would a doctor sworn to do no harm recommend these vaccines without having proper informed consent and not knowing the future adverse outcomes and not being fda approved? Looking forward to and documenting your response.
My watch I did it to see what was going on my heart beating fast it said high heart rate and that’s it and I called 911 went to the hospital. My heart rate was up to 150 and I wasn’t even doing the big exercises it just jumped up all at once which is a concern I can throw you in a fib.!
Soo, you just need to wear your watch on your ankle?
Seems logical as an emergency measure for leads II and III (but certainly not recommended for untrained diagnosis). - What do you think Doc?
😂😂
Apple tells you that that watch can’t tell you anything your best to go to the emergency room if somethings off even if the watch says somethings off you still need to go to the emergency room
Vaccine comes with a free smart watch
I have pericarditis after a virus in 2018.
I also got it after covid. Also have pots. Unvaxxed. 34 year old mother of 4 otherwise I was healthy. 😫
Sooo… if I touch the crown with my right pinky toe…
For the vaccinated you’re saying?
Angel Fournier Rodriguez, Cuba’s most successful rower in history, passed away unexpectedly on Thursday, March 16 in Texas where he had recently moved. He was 35.
Of course, it would be nice if you said the entire story and not just post it to further your agenda. “Fournier Rodriguez had told Cuban media outlet CiberCuba in an interview earlier this year that he had some cardiac problems in 2019.”
www.row2k.com/news/3-17-2023/ángel-fournier-rodriguez-passes-at-age-35/134546/
@@Medcram So maybe the Shot finished the job?
Footballer Zé Carlos Suffers a Shock During a Game, Collapses Twice (VIDEO). No biggie just another young athlete collapsing TWICE
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
44 year old Doctor Carl Anthony Harrison died unexpectedly on March 10, 2023 at his home.
Dr. Harrison was a psychologist with Connecticut Valley Hospital
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
Looks like Michael D’Angelo Painting
Funny thing the body and electricity, we are electric beings and every single thing taking place in our bodies is electrical yet what does our doctors know about electronics?
Quite a bit. We had a section in medical school on this. Electric potentials, ions, gated channels etc. there is also a sub speciality of cardiology called “electrophysiology”.
@@Medcram brilliant 👍
What's your view on the Israeli study of over 250,000 unvaccinated people which found no link between Myocarditis/Pericarditis and covid 19 infection?
It excluded any myocarditis 10 days after a positive test. Furthermore, the absence of evidence does not equal the evidence of absence. This is confirmed when we look at the British study published in the American heart association, which showed after looking at 42 million people that there was a higher risk of myocarditis in Covid than there was with vaccination with the exception of the second dose of Moderna. www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.059970
03/15/23 COVID NEWS
German Health Minister Reverses Course on COVID Vaccine Injuries, Says Injured Being Ignored
Germany’s Federal Minister of Health Karl Lauterbach - a former Harvard University adjunct professor - this week admitted that COVID-19 vaccine adverse events are prevalent and that those suffering from severe vaccine injuries are being ignored.
As he should. He said that the vaccine had no side effects and was in favor of the mandates. We have held neither position.
“While talking to ZDF, he was pressed on his previous stance that the vaccine had no side effects. Lauterbach said this “was an exaggeration I had once made in an ill-considered tweet,” and was keen to downplay the numbers, insisting adverse reactions were still “less than 1 in 10,000 vaccinations.” However, this still amounts to a total of 333,492 cases as reported by the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut.”
@@Medcram People are finally seeing the reality of the injuries and deaths. You can’t hide it anymore and that’s why people are changing their minds
@@unvaxxedAF No they are being hypnotized by disinformation spread by grifters on anti-social media.
Rog, would you happen to know why when someone replies with a thumbs up on my comments, I get the notification via email but it does not show next to the comment? so Baffling 🤡
Rapper Costa Titch dies at 28 after collapsing onstage during music festival. Im guessing everyone is still baffled
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
@@Medcram EIGHT YEARS AGO!!!
@@ts9332 So were the VAERS reports But this DR is muzzled and cannot talk or we loose him and we want him to survive please!
Vaccinated vs. Unvaccinated…
“John Wick” Star Lance Reddick Dies Unexpectedly at 60. I guess 60 is the new 80
Thank you for this video! God bless you! 🙏❤️💯. / God bless everyone who reads this: make sure you know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour everyone! He is coming soon! Don't be left behind! Accept and believe in Jesus Christ! John 3:16, Revelation 20:15, 1 Corrinthians 15 1-4 and Romans 10 9 and 10
I must be the only one with no sound?
Rog, remember when the lab leak, natural immunity and early therapeutic meds were a conspiracy? I do
Isn't it great that you get to keep your license when hundreds of other perfectly good Physicians are losing theirs by trying to communicate the truth.
I'm sure you're proud of yourselves.
Unfortunately the “truth” is a moving target that’s going to take years to be resolved and confirmed.
I bet your comment will be deleted. Doc does that to reality comments.
The government cannot be sued but the doctors can
www.hrsa.gov/vaccine-compensation
money making machine indeed lol
So an over expensive Apple watch cannot do advanced cardio metering and diagnostics. Now tell that to the Apple fanboys!
Director of Kentucky Office of Rural Health, Ernie Scott Dies “Unexpectedly” at 46. Unfortunately he didnt get the memo
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
Vaccine injuries treatment eh
Dragisa Gudelj 25, the brother of Serbia midfielder Nemanja Gudelj who plays for Sevilla, suffered a cardiac arrest during the 11th minute of the first half. Nothing to see here, just another really young athlete collapsing with cardiac arrest on the field.
Onpattro is a RNA in nanoparticle medication FDA approved in 2018 and is infused intravenously at orders of magnitude higher doses every three weeks indefinitely. They’ve were doing it for 3 years before the vaccine. You are only saying something now? No one had issues with Onpattro then (for good reason) why now?
9-year-old Rockland County Girl Suffers "STROKE"... Mae Cunningham suffered a stroke while playing Soccer
Strokes affects 2000 children a year in the US (before the pandemic). It is sad when people use these unfortunate circumstances to further their own agenda. www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/stroke/pediatric-stroke
Utah State Wide Receiver Josh Davis Suffers Sudden Cardiac Arrest During Practice. Just another 20 somethin having a normal cardiac arrest, not
Here’s a review that looked at this back in 2015 and did a nice job of showing how often this is happening unfortunately.
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.015431?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed
Quack quack said the duck
This is just the ticket for those individuals who have taken rushed to market Emergency Use Authorization drugs from convicted felons with limited liability .
Rog are lipid nanoparticles safe or toxic? looking forward to hearing and documenting your response.
thank you
"The lipid nanoparticle component, the biological "package" that carries the mRNA is highly inflammatory." Dr Aseem Malhotra.
@@rightlyso8507 thank you