This is according to the Health Advisory and Recovery Team (HART), a group of highly qualified doctors, scientists and other scientific and academic experts from the United Kingdom, who have published advisories regarding the study’s conclusions.
The new paper, published in the open access peer-reviewed medical journal Medicine and conducted by pathologists from Kanazawa in Japan, reported that its findings came from an autopsy of a healthy 40-year-old man.
“A healthy 40-year-old Japanese man suddenly experienced tachycardia and lost consciousness two days after [COVID-19 mRNA] vaccination,” it said. “Continued resuscitation recovered the spontaneous heartbeat; however, the patient did not regain consciousness and died 9 days later.” (Related: STUDY: Cases of post-covid injection myocarditis continue to skyrocket.)
The study further found that, under autopsy, the patient’s cardiomyocytes – or cardiac muscle cells – were undergoing necrotic death and “were scattered in the right and left ventricles.”
The study also reported that the patient’s myocarditis “was focal and mild, as is mostly observed following COVID-19 mRNA vaccination.”
“However, the inflammatory foci were close to the conduction system [of the heart] and were considered the cause of fatal arrhythmia,” it added. The study noted that the patient was tested negative for COVID-19.
Man’s vaccine-related death covered up
HART raised its concern that, because the fatal arrhythmia occurred after the second dose, it seems likely that the case was not reported due to concerns that such reporting may affect COVID-19 vaccine intake.
“The possibility that inflammation affecting just the conductive system might result in fatal arrhythmia is a concern we have previously raised in relation to the mRNA products,” HART stated. “It is to be noted that this man presented suddenly with an arrhythmia (ventricular tachycardia) which ultimately proved fatal; preceding chest pain characteristic of myocarditis was not reported.”
This is consistent with concerns raised by HART that subclinical myocarditis does indeed result in an increased risk of fatal arrhythmias, which may be responsible for most or all of the rise in ambulance callouts for cardiac arrests.
Subclinical myocarditis – defined as a rise in troponin indicative of some cardiac damage – has been found in at least one in 50 people injected with the mRNA COVID-19 injection in studies where researchers have routinely looked for it.
Dr. Clare Craig, a pathologist and co-chairperson of HART, further noted that the level of detail the Japanese dissection underwent and was required to ascertain how near the areas of inflammation were to the conductive system “is a skill that is only present among certain pathologists.”
Furthermore, the type of post-mortem examination done on the Japanese patient is not routinely conducted in the Western world, including in the United Kingdom where HART is based.
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