Do 1 in 35 people have myocarditis after a COVID vaccine? No.
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- Опубліковано 8 сер 2023
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The paper being misinterpreted: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/e...
What is Troponin?: my.clevelandclinic.org/health...
Exercise can slightly increase Troponin, so slightly elevated Troponin alone does not diagnose myocarditis:
www.internationaljournalofcar...
www.ajconline.org/article/S00...
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.11...
www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.11...
Diagnosis of myocarditis: my.clevelandclinic.org/health... - Наука та технологія
Had elevated troponin levels for 3 weeks after my first marathon. Came up in routine blood test.
So what would make the kids who were tested look like they’d just run a marathon? 🤔
@@Mark_Jacobson81 you easily get that much after walking, jogging, swimming an hour.. old guy needs a refresher course for his ancient education, or he is intentionally misleading folk for rage clicks bait
@@Mark_Jacobson81 - It didn't. They had *slightly* elevated levels, which you've now taken to be the same as parkinson1963's level without any evidence.
What’s your marathon time?
The studies I have seen show troponin levels peak right after the marathon. The Swiss study tested troponin increases on day 3. I wish we had data 24 hours after vaccination.
0:10 - “This one’s easy, I don’t even need my afro for it.”
I’m dead. 🤣
I was going to compliment Dan on his new hairstyle actually. His kind of hair isn't easy to style.
But I thought it off topic.
No way, are you vaccinated?
@@Jason-wm5qe Congrats in not understanding a common use of a common word. The world must be tough for you.
"Safe and effective"
@@RabJ208
""Safe and effective"'
Correct.
The study explicitly excluded people who had exercised prior to the blood test.
It’s in the first couple of minutes of Campbell’s video. Please, do watch the videos you’re criticizing.
It’s you who is debunked not Campbell.
He is just presenting the findings of a well conducted study…
ua-cam.com/video/V5S-j8oQQ1c/v-deo.html
Says right in the study "No cases of myocarditis were found." The end.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
I've recently watched a few videos from a Dr. Philip McMillan. He seems to be another Dr. Campbell but with a following about 1/10 that of Campbell. Given that they do not all have the same motives, I don't know what to make of these guys. For some it's probably about money. With others, notoriety. I don't rule out some kind of cognitive problems.
Yea it’s interesting. I often wonder why folks like Dr Campbell receive orders of magnitude more attention than Mr Wilson and others.
What do they see that we do not? How can we help them?
@@Jason-wm5qe Campbell counts on people not checking out what he says, especially when he leaves out relevant phrases and deceives his audience. People like you, as a matter of fact.
@@Jason-wm5qe Dr. Wilson speaks the truth. Campbell speaks bull$#!T. Ridiculous people would rather hear BS than the truth. They seek it out.
@@diandian9827 is your hypothesis that Dr Campbell is manipulating people? I don’t watch his channel btw, but it sounds like you know a lot about him
Thinking errors in their followers.
I watched that guy until he promoted Ivermectin. He did not understand dosage 😐.
fighting the good fight but at times it must feel like playing whack-a-mole.
Notice how quickly these people move on to a new claim after their previous one doesn't pan out. They never own up to being wrong. They just move on.
@@spacetoast7783 The pro vax mob have been wrong about everything and own up to nothing.
Anyway, without even looking at the paper, it's pretty obvious that the 1/35 figure is baloney. The number of people who would suffer from myocarditis would be insanely high, we wouldn't even need a paper like that to know it's happening. Do John Campbell's audience really believe "they" would be able to hide that?
They believe the virus is man made, the virus doesn't exist, the covid vaccines are microchips, 5G is killing people, the vaccines are causing heart problems on a scale never before. So yeah, these clowns are actually stupid enough to believe this shit.
@@sithwolf8017 Dude, you really are the perfect 'useful idiot' Hats off
@@philo3479Seriously Dr. Phraud these are actual conspiracy theories your crowd believes. Hypocrisy is the bread and butter of conspiracy theorists like antivaxers. For example many antivaxers blame Biden for the virus, saying he's a criminal mastermind that tricked the planet. Yet in that same sentence they'll claim he's a lying bumbling idiot for ruining the country with covid prevention measures. See the problem?
@sithwolf8017 Nobody blames biden for the varus. Biden isn't even at home. Alot of people do blame the dog torturer though. He is the one that snuk into the whitehouse during the peak trump kaos and got the executive branch to end the pause on making varius more awesome! And then he sent the $20 million to china. China!
The most remarkable thing about JC is the fact that he's still active on UA-cam.
Money talks
Wonder why 'Big Brother' aren't targeting Dr John? Orwell I'm sure would be shocked....Lol
Well he’s incredibly successful. Would you stop something you’re good at?
@@Jason-wm5qe If it conflicted with my ethics? Absolutely. But obviously John Campbell is unethical.
@@jaykanta4326 interesting. can you name the ethic you feel he’s violated?
I've read and discussed this paper. It is a free download. Lots of problems with it the way the AV'ers are using it. One, it used Moderna. So not all vaccines or mRNA ones are the same. 2 , the Troponin levels weren't measured until AFTER the vaccine was given. ie no pre booster baseline. 3. The charts in the paper state NO ADVERSE EFFECTS. It even states the the effects are all transient. TRANSIENT. For all the talk on how much myocarditis is created, the effects found were so low that they self resolved without the person even knowing about it. And for all the talk of how much myocarditis is generated out of Moderna, 22 out of 40 cases detected, according to their methodology. 18 out of the 40 cases, they did detect were "background" ie natural levels.
My understanding is that raised troponin levels may indicate myocardial damage. Is it not the case that myocardial damage is scarring of the heart? It's also my understanding that scarring of the heart could be permanent (not reversible), and may have life affecting outcomes. I don't believe that scarring of the heart is meaningless. Please clarify
@@fastenit27 A long walk can raise troponin levels so by your logic we'd all have scarring of the heart.
I'm just reading and quoting the study. The paper appeared to account for exercise and other factors that could affect elevated troponin levels, which is in conflict with Dr. Wilson's critique. From reading the study do you see contraindication? Also, the paper concludes with this: ""...myocardial injury was found to be much more common than previously thought. It occurred in one out of 35 persons, was mild and transient, and more frequent in women versus men." The findings appear to be consistent with two other studies. It's also my understanding that the paper was peer reviewed. I know peer view does not guarantee anything. When I was in college I took a couple research courses where we had to review peer reviewed studies to find discrepancies, but that was years ago. I'm trying to find truth. Do you have a background in research? @@NonFlyiingDutchman
Do you have a background in medical research. I'd like find truth if I can. Regarding your three points: 1.) I would assume different vaccines would yield different results/outcomes. 2.) It's my understanding from reading the study, that they had a matched control group for measuring troponin levels (see Methods and Results). 3.) I could interpret "no adverse effects" in two ways: a.) underlying scarring to the heart, but no symptoms or b.) no symptoms or heart scarring or damage of any sort. I did not see in the paper where the researchers ruled out or in scarring. It is my understanding that the troponin levels were transient, nothing else. My take on this research is that further study is needed to offer greater insight regarding heart scarring or other negative outcomes.
@@fastenit27The paper doesn't claim there is 'scarring of the heart'.The fact that they attempted to control for exercise raising troponin levels should tell you how common it is for troponin levels to be raised. Obviously not everyone who has ever done exercise has a damaged heart. In your quote it's telling that you crop out "mild, transient..." from your quote "myocardial injury.was found to be much more common..". Mild and transient means not severe and not permanent. I've worked my whole career in research, does it concern you at all the Campbell has no background in scientific research?
nurse Campbell is an absolute grifter. willing to cause people harm for money.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
when I first heard of this 1/35 paper, the very first thing I thought of was - they must just be measuring troponin and calling in myocarditis. But the AV lunacy is now a giant juggernaut dragon that cant be slayed. so sad, but the gov let this happen.
Yes the government let it happen by allowing an untested and completely new type of vaccine to be rolled out globally without being safety tested to the standards that previous vaccines were. Plus giving them indemnity!
I have never heard once one of you pro mRNA jabbers actually admit that there are more side effects than what we were initially told. Plus the little fact that they knew it wouldn’t stop infection and transmission but they still mandated that everyone had to have it. And you think it’s surprising that a large swathe of the population is outraged by it? Stop being so naive. Take some responsibility.
@@Mark_Jacobson81" untested"
Lying anti-vaxxer lies. News at 11.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
@@incognito6699 Please don't plagiarize.
Thats all you have, cant handle the facts. lol @@jaykanta4326
He's still batting around the allegation that Pfizer never tested for transmission. Most recently, it was with Pfizer representatives in front of an Australian panel. Campbell does his version of a "reaction video" to various questions and subsequent responses. Is he clueless or is it an act?
How about both?
Both, but veering heavily toward an act. He will have studied that sly unmentionable, Russell Brand for the reaction vids. It seems like accuracy and honesty is no longer important to him.
JC " guides " his viewers what to think and how to react ( also could be called brainwashing and manipulation) so the overt exaggerated nodding and face grimacing is subliminal for the viewers to react alike as their hero with " integrity".
@@S.Wally. He also needs to get a pair of glasses that don't need constant adjustment!
@@aq9415 ahahaha....yes !!!
Do you ever report people like Campbell to UA-cam because of the misinformation they dole out, Doc W?
Coming from you who has probably been pricked 6 or 7 times 🤣👌
@concretehead2790, I'll explain a little more clearly so that you understand. In my responce to he/she who initiated this thread; I typed the following: "coming from you who has probably been pricked (jabbed) 6 or 7 times".
@@RabJ208 Honestly, why bother writing this? What a strange comment.
@@gavcarl, so you don't see the irony?
@@gavcarl, have you received 6 or 7 jabs?
Among 777 participants, 40 had elevated hs-cTnT concentration and vaccine-associated myocardial injury was adjudicated in 22 participants, so even at best, only 22 people had something more serious going on after vaccination (2.8%, not "1 in 5"). Plus, the elevations were mild and only temporary... And vaccine-associated myocardial injury was more common than previously thought, but still being mild and transient. In other words, not exactly an issue to worry about (but JC always finds a way to spin it in an alarmist way)...
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
Doc, have you thought about responding to BS about the vaccine being dessigned to spare Jews and Chinese?
I remember another video of JC's, linking catching (bad) covid to having Neanderthal genes.
It was shall we say, a bit far fetched.
Campbell drank the kool-aid. Thanks for debunking his "theory."
No he saw the views and money that came with Lol
"Safe and effective"
Not really “drinking the kool aid when he’s become a multi millionaire. He’s one dishing out the kool aid.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
Good to see people are tearing into John Campbell, the one from the UK I mean, not the news reporter from NZ
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
Thanks Dr Wilson ❤
Campbell is a conman.
Be a good citizen, wear your mask and take your jabs. Lol
@@RabJ208 Poor likkle rabj. Fwightened of all the smart people who don't get their 'information' from garbage websites.
@@RabJ208for a supposed "non-complier" and "free-thinker" you seem to have a fairly servile dedication to the Covid contrarian ideology. Makes one think how much your "freedom" is worth when this is how you use it.
@@RabJ208 you mean the "citizen troll" you are? No real job yet?
@@RabJ208 I forgot youre so informed with your md/do or phd in molecular biology you must know what youre talking about.
Another cause of increased troponin is giving birth, particularly with a long labour.
It happens any time your body is working, basically.
COVID-19 causes mitochondrial dysfunction in heart and other organs, finds a new study. The study found that in autopsy tissue, mitochondrial gene expression had recovered in the lungs, but mitochondrial function remained suppressed in the heart as well as the kidneys and liver.
Can you cite the study please? Curious if the offender is the spike protein.
@@philo3479 Core mitochondrial genes are down-regulated during SARS-CoV-2 infection of rodent and human hosts
JOSEPH W. GUARNIERI
You're aware this is about infection with the actual covid virus, not the vaccine, right? Or is that your point?
@@May_Day45 Listening to you morons try to talk about biology or medicine is like listening to a toddler try to explain the causes of WWI.
thank you, the short form corrections will get through to people
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
It's great that you and others are calling out Campbell's bs, but what good does it do when Campbell shadow bans any criticism and/or links to the facts? I think you and others like you should write an open letter to the health agencies in the US and UK, cc to Google (et al.), condemning his misinformation. Force him into having to defend what he's saying in an open forum instead of allowing him to hide in protected channels where no criticism is allowed. (Funny, how he always talks about being censored.)
Can you link the facts here for us to read?
@@Jason-wm5qe Do you have trouble reading descriptions? Wilson provides two links for you.
@@ddgyt50 I’m genuinely curious which facts Campbell shadow bans? Don’t just start attacking because I asked a question
@@Jason-wm5qe Sorry for my acerbic reaction. My comment was more of a generalization based on other channels which have mentioned being shadow banned (@Backtothescience), and one (@ProfGregTuckerKellogg) which invited Campbell to a discussion about Ivermectin with no response. (Remember, Campbelll always cries about no debate.) And, of course, this channel.
thank you
Campbell is a stunning example of someone chasing the algorithm and tripping into a rabbit hole.
It's called audience capture
More like doing a Triple Lindy down the rabbit hole...lllol
Well, hes making mad money doing it.
I wish I had recieved my jabs. Anyone know where I can go to get my first? 🤣👍
It's unclear to me if he has actually begon to believe his own bullsh*t, or if he is deliberatly misleading for money, attention and clicks.
Thanks, Dr. Dan. Dr. Oliver on UA-cam and Dr. Jon on Tik Tok have also shredded Campbell’s terrible disinformation.
The more the merrier.
Why don’t you want to call Dr Campbell a doctor?
@Jason-wm5qe Because a PhD from Bolton University in teaching videos is worthless in this context.
@@enjek5654 sure. It’s just cold objective pragmatism, not an attempt to discredit an opponent. Just as you’re doing
@@Jason-wm5qeBecause he's a PhD in nursing education passing himself off as a physician. May be Dr C to you, but nurse Campbell to the rest of us.
Love this quick format, Dan!👏
It's about all the Chief Cook at the rat-infested Campbell soup kitchen is worth these days.
@@williamverhoef4349, don't be so bitter Willy. Not good for the heart mate. Lol
Yes agree, the basic details required to dismiss Campbell's claims delivered in just one minute. Very effective.
@@MysticOblong, hello MO. Are you still trolling this channel? Lol
@@RabJ208 Hello Rab. Can't believe you are still obsessed with vaccines. You are like that Japanese soldier hiding in a jungle on an island who thought the war was still on in the 1970s. Campbell is just spouting blatant conspiracies these days. Total joke. Surprised I don't see you in his comments. I still say hello to your mate Sammy White now and then.
RN here. Can confirm.
@rabj2833 Obviously you are such a killjoy you would rather that people who you know to be on a war footing against covid-19 were disallowed solidarity and morale boosting, Rabbie. Your GF (if she exists) will understand, even if you lack the humanity to. You're still a drain and a haw-haw after all the years that have passed since the pandemic began 🙄
Who cares? Were you participating or helping choreograph dance routines with your fellow colleagues during March 2020? My GF is a night sister and her colleagues performed many dancing routines during March 2020 and shared on TIkTok while he world was under strict lockdown. I suppose you'll come back and say that you were too buzy to do the dancing? Lol
@@RabJ208 How do you go about normal life being so angry all the time? It must be exhausting.
@@RabJ208Tell the world that you don't want to understand, Rabbie. Tell the world you can't care less. I was working as usual, because I work in a key industry. My family and my staff had important discussions early on to make sure we kept to protocols and kept each other safe within our workplace bubbles and respective family bubbles. We all understood how important infection prevention measures are. None of us caught covid before we could have our vaccinations. Things were different for people in healthcare settings at the front line. Many hospital staff died from covid, and many more have long covid which makes life difficult. But hey!, Rabbie here doesn't care about the risk from SARS-CoV2 his GF was under and how important it is to keep up morale in a pandemic situation. Why doesn't Rabbie want to learn about the science of beating a pandemic? 🤔
@@hrlincoln9873 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬
Perhaps someone should debunk the debunker? I have looked again at the video by Dr Campbell referred to and he makes very clear that the study he was referring to EXCLUDED other possible causes of the elevated levels of troponin, such as running etc. So, it is correct, that 2.8% or 1 in 35 of study participants had myocardial injury following the jab. They were then monitored and warned e.g., not to go running (which could have caused a cardiac arrest etc) and thankfully all participants avoided such consequences.
Dude, I’ve been through all his videos and he’s projecting. You’re never gonna believe it, but it’s actually the debunker who is totally wrong. Idk if he purposely takes these guys out of context so he can straw man their arguments, or if he has some sort of psychological or even neurological thing that doesn’t allow him to comprehend what’s being said. I just hope I never have a doctor like this.
I feel like the normal distribution alone could account for 1/35 people having raised troponin
Also, what was their level BEFORE the vax?
Indeed. The normal range is up to 0.04 ng/ml. Levels above 0.39 ng/ml usually mean there has been heart damage. Many people with healthy hearts have levels between 0.04 and 0.39 ng/ml. Heart damage is excluded with specific tests suck as ECG and cardiac scans. That was done here. Campbell was a nurse, he knows this (or should know it).
According to the study the probability of seeing these results by chance is less than 0.001
@@DO-NOT-COMPLY According to the study of probability, there's 99.99999% chance your post was pure BS.
Hi folks....quick question:
Does anyone know why myocardial and cardiac related death and disease and ofcourse excess death on a global scale has been on a steep incline since 2021?
It's so sad to see the decline of this guy. He was completely captured by his audience.
Yeah. Considering his early pandemic reports showing how there was misinformation on high levels of myocarditis and vaccine side effects, he swiftly moved into full conspiracy profiteer in a very self contradictory Segway.
And the money
@@SuteruniAnd the notoriety. And getting to mix with millionaire misinformationists and their merry-go-rounds of anti-vaccine grift. And getting to go to right grifty conspiriconferences, even if just on screen.
But mostly the money. His 2022 - 2023 accounts will be available soon. Luvley jubbley!
Which of them? Not trolling😅
@@DC-wt2vi yes I'm going for 4 million since he set up his company June 2020.
Higher T levels are quite common in people who engage in vigorous exercise. The point isn't that people who got vaxed engaged in exercise. It's that having a higher T level doesn't mean you have myocarditis. Are you concerned about people who go jogging having myocardotis? Look at Susan Oliver's video on this topic. She cites studied with numbers.
The research paper did not mention that the 777 people were involved in strenuous activity. There paper stated that the increase was due to "vaccine-associated myocardial injury". Dr. Wilson did nothing to debunk the research paper.
The paper says 2 subjects of 324, so how does John come up with 1 on 35?
22 in 777 had 'vaccine-associated myocardial injury', that's 2.8% or 1 in 35.
@@gribbler1695
- Rubbish.
Very good call keeping it succinct and to the point
The definition of myocardial injury in the study, based on an increase in high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) without an apparent alternative cause, could potentially overlap with conditions or activities that also elevate troponin levels, such as intense exercise. However, there are key distinctions:
1. **Context of Measurement**: The study measured troponin levels within a specific timeframe after vaccination (48-96 hours). This controlled timing aims to associate changes in troponin levels more directly with the vaccination rather than other causes.
2. **Exclusion of Other Causes**: The study's methodology aimed to identify vaccine-associated myocardial injury by excluding other potential causes for the troponin increase. This would presumably include considering participants' activity levels and other factors that might affect troponin levels.
3. **Clinical Significance**: While exercise can transiently increase troponin levels, the clinical context is different. Exercise-induced increases are generally not considered indicative of myocardial injury in the same way as increases following vaccination, in the absence of other symptoms or clinical findings.
4. **Interpretation and Implications**: The finding of a 2.8% incidence of myocardial injury post-vaccination does not directly equate to a 2.8% incidence of clinical myocarditis. Myocardial injury as defined in the study is a more specific term related to biochemical markers and may not necessarily manifest as clinical myocarditis, which involves inflammation of the heart muscle and potentially more severe symptoms.
5. **Need for Balanced Understanding**: It's important to interpret the study's findings in a balanced way. While the study suggests a higher incidence of myocardial injury post-vaccination than previously thought, these cases were generally mild and transient. Also, the overall benefits of vaccination in preventing severe COVID-19 illness must be weighed against the risk of such side effects.
In summary, while the study's definition of myocardial injury centers on biochemical markers that can be influenced by other factors, including exercise, its methodology aimed to identify vaccine-associated changes. The findings should be interpreted with an understanding of the nuances and limitations of such studies.
Thanks Dr Wilson!
John really has fallen off its sad to see.
Sad to see Dr John hasn't been pricked 7 or 8 times?
1 From the study: "First, our findings confirmed the study hypothesis. mRNA-1273booster vaccination-associated elevation of markers of myocar-dial injury occurred in about one out of 35 persons (2.8%), agreater incidence than estimated in meta-analyses of hospital-ized cases with myocarditis (estimated incidence 0.0035%) afterthe second vaccination."
Pretty sad when Campbell's nonsense can be soundly debunked, with evidence, in a 1 minute video.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
I used to be a fan of John Campbell early on until he went of the rails during the pandemic.
"Went off the rails" meaning he stopped following the "safe and effective" narrative because he had been seeing evidence against the vax?
@@Jasper_11 you need to watch the daily videos from 2020 through 2021, he wasn't a puppet he was spouting his own opinion and guving advice under the
" guise " of a " Doctor ".
Funny how everyone celebrates his 180 degree turn, to me that is a massive Ted flag, if he was so adamant back then how can anyone believe his views now ? Understand it is for personal financial profit and the rest makes sense. His new viewers don't even realise he was never a doctor in the UK.
dr campbell talks about myocardial not myocarditis
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
I'm glad you didn't call him 'doctor'.
4 From the study: "Therefore, the main finding of this study, that subclinical mRNAvaccine-associated myocardial injury is much more common than estimated based on passive surveillance, has been confirmed andgeneralized in these complimentary cohorts of slightly older health-care workers in Israel and adolescents in Thailand."
Thank you for making these videos. You are clearing up a lot of confusion I still carry from being in a conspiratorial mindset for a long time
Dr Susan Oliver is a good one to watch as well. Unique
It is good that you are recovering from a conspiratorial mindset.
Did you know that Dr Wilson used to be a conspiracy theorist?
I was once a conspiracy theorist too. Now I proudly wear 3 masks at the same time and on my 8th jab now. Safe as houses me 🤣👍
@@lindaward- Did you learn any real facts, like this?
09/14/2021
Lancaster, PA - The Pennsylvania Department of Health's report on COVID-19 post-vaccination cases, commonly known as “breakthrough cases,” shows the overwhelming majority of cases, hospitalizations and deaths in the state are among the unvaccinated.
“With nearly seven million Pennsylvanians fully vaccinated, the data makes it clear: the vaccines are safe and effective at preventing severe illness from COVID-19,” Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam said today during a news conference at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Hospital’s Suburban Pavilion.
“The overwhelming majority of the COVID-19 related cases, hospitalizations and deaths in Pennsylvania occurred in people who were not vaccinated,” she said. “In fact, the data shows that compared to unvaccinated people, fully vaccinated Pennsylvanians are seven times less likely to get COVID-19, and eight times less likely to die from COVID-19.”
@@RabJ208- Funny boy, eh?
09/14/2021
Lancaster, PA - The Pennsylvania Department of Health's report on COVID-19 post-vaccination cases, commonly known as “breakthrough cases,” shows the overwhelming majority of cases, hospitalizations and deaths in the state are among the unvaccinated.
“With nearly seven million Pennsylvanians fully vaccinated, the data makes it clear: the vaccines are safe and effective at preventing severe illness from COVID-19,” Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam said today during a news conference at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Hospital’s Suburban Pavilion.
“The overwhelming majority of the COVID-19 related cases, hospitalizations and deaths in Pennsylvania occurred in people who were not vaccinated,” she said. “In fact, the data shows that compared to unvaccinated people, fully vaccinated Pennsylvanians are seven times less likely to get COVID-19, and eight times less likely to die from COVID-19.”
But Joe Rogan said…… Hahahahaaaaaaa
Yeah, almost as funny as Biden, Fauci, Walensky and Co telling you that if you got vaccinated, you wouldn't get the virus, 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Participants were advised to 'avoid strenuous exercise'. If It was a controlled study, exercise would not have been allowed in house. However, if they were doing outpatient visits then they could have been doing exercise.
There will always be a number of side effects to medications of all varieties because they have an effect on the system. JC makes a meal out of this quite trivial finding that does not show high levels in the cases shown. He talks as if one in 35 have been seriously harmed by the jab, (based on this information) yet anyone that has a morning run will probably have similar levels of troponins in their blood. Needless to say, in rare cases some recipients have had serious myocarditis, and is well documented. His main crime is to not put this into proper perspective, even though he's qualified to easily do so.
But I thought the covid jabs were safe and effective?
They are. John Campbell just wants you to think that they're not. Hope that helped.
@@Grim_Beard, yeah okay. You say they are 'safe and effective' so they must be. Lol
The data show unequivocally that they are safe and effective. You can ignore reality all you like, but that won't change it.
@Grim_Beard , what data shows you that they are 'safe and effective'? Point me to the adverse event data you are reading....
It certainly helps! Thanks
Thanks for the video :)
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
@@incognito6699
Huh, thanks for the random info dump, but did you reply to the wrong comment?
The study is actually only 11 pages and is a very easy read even for an a/c guy. It was funded to verify an isreal hospital study and the thialand childrens study. This one had over 1000 participants.
Will you please stop spamming.
Reported for spam. Good job, gonna lose that account.
@@jaykanta4326lol. The actual study isn't spam.
@@NathansHVAC Nearing the 300 comment mark, you're spamming nutter.
@@muzikgodI do ramble. Gain of fuuuunction really gets me going.
Thank you.
Thank you Dr. Wilson, I hope your channel continues to grow and eventually you start getting more recognition in the media.
the only recognition he will get is for jabbing toddlers.
@@Mark_Jacobson81lol yes. Despicable
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
I'm sure you can get on main stream TV after all you are saying everything the government want you to say.
Thank you, this one was short, but, alas, the deplorables will yet again fall for the myth rather than the enlightenment.
How much political it became, hey !? The truth no longer matters. At the beginning, Campbell believed in these "vaccines".
Oh yes you’re soooo enlightened and intelligent 😅
Deplorables? You mean the folks that are severely misinformed by the anti vaccine propaganda? These are regular people, with wrong information, often brought to them by online video, and 'doctors' and yoga instructors etc.
Thank you ❤
You say in the video and in the description that he is misinterpreting the paper. Is he? Or is the paper also making the same mistake you point out? I'm no scientist, but a quick look at the paper makes me think it might be the latter.
It was an honest paper that clearly described the limitations of it’s own study and pretty much declared that it is inconclusive. In short it said -we did this work, our study group was unavoidably flawed, we saw some minor differences and we don’t know if it’s abnormal or not. We don’t have enough info to draw a good conclusion.
Thanks for your great videos, some other content worth disassembling could be the Mergonomics channel or Owen Benjamin
Fuck yeah bite size funks to debunks with Doc Wilson the hunk
From the Swiss website: "The focus of the vaccination recommendation for autumn 2022 is the protection of people who are particularly at risk from a serious illness. These include people who are 65 years old or older. On the other hand, they include people between the ages of 16 and 64 who have an increased individual risk of developing the disease, for example due to a previous illness or pregnancy. A booster vaccination is primarily recommended for these groups of people. It offers, at least temporarily, improved individual protection against a severe course of the disease"
"All persons over the age of 5 years and with residence or general practitioner in the canton of Appenzell I.Rh. can be vaccinated in a family doctor's practice in the canton. Children and young people between the ages of 5 and 16 must be accompanied by a legal guardian. Children's vaccinations are also offered in the Herisau or Heiden vaccination centers or in the St. Gallen Children's Hospital in Eastern Switzerland . "
What? No forced vaccination in switzerland? No babies. either. Switzerland must hate babies.
And, no healthy people recommended in Switzerland? The swiss must hate healthy people too.
Anybody wanting to see the official swiss website should just seearch "Im Zentrum der Impfempfehlung für den Herbst 2022"
We might have to booomb Switzerland now. They are clearly russian proopaganda.
Surprised to see you cite the Cleveland Clinic. Great video, though.
Amazing Mr Wilson! You should make shorts
@@Jasper_11 why not spread the cringe for all to see?
Yes take many shots about 4 should keep you from getting covid only 3 times and passing It on 3 times - put two masks on and don't go outside for 6 months- we need to protect the elderly!!!! 80 is the average age of death correct from Covid. You keep worrying about JC while Fauci líes to congress.......oh sorry you said "make shorts"
I also read this paper after JC made his claims. The paper itself was refreshingly honest about it’s own limitations and openly described what other factors cause raised troponin in the range of this study and discussed how it interpreted it’s own results. It also noted that none of it subjects suffered myocarditis. It is a well written paper and easy to follow even for non scientists. I’m surprised it was published as it doesn’t really contribute any meaningful information other than to say we did this study and whilst we saw a small troponin response to vaccination it’s a little inconclusive and really no more than we would expect from moderate exercise. John Campbell turned it into something else of course. On occasion I would be forgiving JC of basic misunderstandings but this paper was so easy to follow that there can be no mistake and JC’s re-interpretation was deliberate misinformation to his audience that he knows full well prefer to believe him than read the papers for themselves. As you say, an easy one to bust hence the short video. I was shocked by JC and reported the video as misinformation, but I think UA-cam are now happier to look at viewer stats and have reigned in their creator strikes.
And the part when the authors say. "extendand corroborate observations in two recent active surveillancestudies after BNT162b2 vaccination"? I'll check Wilson's videos to see if he debunked the isreal study and the thialand study. I think I remember him debunking the tialand study already by simply saying. "It's thialand". But, I have to confirm.
It is probably safe to say the researchers of the Swiss study are canceled. They tried to do farmas own job because farma won't do this study.
I couldn't find Wilson's video on the Thailand study. Fortunately Reuters pick up the ball and debunked saying the young children required hospitalization not from the medicine, but from:
"many of the survey participants (44%) had other underlying diseases including asthma, allergies, blood or thyroid disorders and migraine"
It is awesome they found diseases to pin the results on. Those Indonesian kids seem really unhealthy. Probably the rice. Or worse.
Isreal seems to be a deep Rabbit hole. They have a bunch of studies showing number much higher than marketing says. And they are all debunked by various main stream news papers. No causation. Didn't test for covid. Genetics. Heck, maybe exercise really does make people unhealthy?
So how do you explain the rise in heart related deaths among a group who regularly gave their hearts a thorough workout - athletes? Before Covid the average was 2.35 per month. Between Jan 21 and Apr 22 the number was 42 per month.
Where did you get those numbers from?
From a FactCheck article by Saranac Spencer:
'“There is no uptick in sudden cardiac arrest or death in athletes due to COVID-19 or from COVID vaccinations. This is total misinformation,” Dr. Jonathan Drezner told us in an emailed statement.
Drezner is the director of the UW Medicine Center for Sports Cardiology at the University of Washington, editor in chief of the British Journal of Sports Medicine, and a team physician for the Seattle Seahawks, the OL Reign soccer team and the University of Washington Huskies.
. . .
Drezner said his center monitors “all cases and all causes” of sudden cardiac arrest or death in athletes by working with the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “[T]here is no change,” he said.
The National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research catalogs injuries for high school and college athletes, and its most recent report covers the 2020-21 school year. It shows that 21 athletes died while playing their sport that year.
. . .
The center’s director, Dr. Kristen Kucera, told us that so far, “the numbers are the same and it’s actually fewer than we captured in 2018-19.”
For context, the center reported 19 deaths in 2019-20, 25 deaths in 2018-19 and 21 deaths in 2017-18.
Similarly, Dr. Robert Cantu, the center’s medical director, told us in an emailed statement that he’s seen no increase in athlete deaths and called the claims “misinformation.”
“The statistics don’t bear out that there’s been an increase in events among athletes,” Dr. Curt Daniels, professor of cardiovascular medicine and director of the sports cardiology program at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, told us in a phone interview.
The field of sports cardiologists who oversee the health of athletes is relatively small, Daniels said. “We talk and communicate all the time,” he said, and none of his colleagues has flagged a rise in sudden cardiac arrest.
“There’s been no increase,” he said.
Also, Daniels noted, there’s a high vaccination rate among athletes in part because many organizations require vaccination to participate. He noted that a rare side effect of the mRNA vaccines is heart inflammation, or myocarditis, which has primarily affected young men between 12 and 24 years old after a second dose, as we’ve explained before. The risk is highest for males ages 16 to 17, at 106 cases per million doses after the second dose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Those cases have appeared to resolve faster and have better clinical outcomes when compared with the more common cases of myocarditis caused by viral infection, including from the virus that causes COVID-19.
Despite that, anti-vaccine campaigners have distorted the rare vaccine side effect as being more common than it is, using that misrepresentation in claims about increases in athlete deaths.
For those who develop myocarditis, stressing the heart with intense physical activity could create an arrhythmia resulting in a cardiac event, Daniels said.
“And, in fact,” Daniels said, “we have not seen an increase in events.”
So, he said, if the vaccines were causing an increase in sudden deaths, “we would be seeing it here and we’re not.”
Young people and teenagers have always died to heart failure without any reason.
@@verstappa Yes, some young people do die of heart failure. But "some" lacks mathematical precision and it doesn't answer my question. I want an explanation for the HUGE RISE in the RATE of heart related deaths of ATHLETES. 2.35 per month pre vaccine versus 42 per month post vaccine is a COLOSSAL RISE of 1787%. Use your best maths to explain these numbers please.
@@verstappa keep towing that line comrade
3 From the study: "Our findings following mRNA-1273 booster vaccination extendand corroborate observations in two recent active surveillancestudies after BNT162b2 vaccination."
Dead suddenly.... no thanks.
Debunk the study not the title of his video.
Waste of time.
He used to give great anatomy videos for nursing students.
True, but then he saw pandering to anti-vaxxers brought him more acclaim - and money.
His medical lectures were also really good. I am an experienced gp and I got a lot out of them. A sad decline.
He's funding his retirement. He looks really unwell lately though.
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
@@incognito6699 Thank you. That's a very good explanation for two very different conditions.
I see this gentlemen took on this one. Shoot... his video is shorter than my post on JCs page! I rarely post, but felt i needed to on this one.
Copy and pasted my comment here for reading pleasure 😁
"''
I know this will probably fall on deaf ears, or I'll be called a big pharma shill, but what the hell. If you'll hear me out... And you're not squeamish of the truth, we may learn something together.
And if, by chance, you think I got something wrong (or right) please let me know. I will gladly edit my post, and thank you.
1st: there's a big difference between myocardial injury and myocarditis. It's like saying Lower Extremity Injury and femur fracture. The former can be a myriad of things; anything from a bruise to a loss of limb. The latter is much more specific, but always more serious than a bruise.
The authors even make this distinction in the 2nd paragraph:
"We hypothesized that COVID-19 mRNA-vaccine-associated MYOCARDIAL INJURY following booster vaccination may be much more common, [than myocarditis] as symptoms may be unspecific, mild or even absent."
Despite this, John then busts out a textbook and reads the risks associated with MYOCARDITIS. See what he did there? Nice slight of hand.
Also, keep in mind: although this paper isn't about vaccine myocarditis, myocarditis from COVID is MUCH worse than myocarditis from mRNA vaccines.
I do give John some credit though, he didn't hide the fact that exercise and running can ALSO raise troponins and cause myocardial injury. He states "the doctors and scientists screened the employees getting boosted, and if they had a reason why they might have increased troponins... like they'd just run a marathon, they were excluded".
Re-read that last sentence.
Study details: after boosting they measured the rise of a specific type of troponins called High Sensitivity Cardiac Troponins or hs-cTnT. Normal levels are considered
So are you still for vaccine mandates considering they don’t stop infection or transmission? I have yet to see someone go against the official narrative in any way shape or form, from the pro big pharma side.
Good comment, I imagine you won't get many replies from John's channel.
@MJKI81 are you still for childhood vaccines considering they don't stop infection?
@@sithwolf8017 for my kids, I chose to get them only the first child dose, of the Pfizer vax. Most myocarditis was after 2nd dose of moderna.
But it has nothing to do with infection or transmission. I knew it wouldn't stop either at the time. That's not why I was getting it. It was to protect against poor outcomes from the virus.
Side note my son has heart condition so I had to be more cautious than most with regard to COVID. but also with Vax associated myocarditis. I'm almost certain my choice was/is best regarding odds.
Well done with the thoughtful comment. It'd be worth pasting it back in every now and then to keep it in view as the torrent of idiocy flows into the cesspool. Within an hour it'll be buried deep down under piles of conspiracies.
love your videos. but i got motion sickness from this one. thank you for your hard work!
Thank you for these videos!
Thanks!
2 From the study: "The significantly higher rate of mRNA-1273 boostervaccination-associated myocardial injury in women versus men mayat least partly be related to the higher vaccine dose per body weightor myocardial mass in women and therefore dose-dependent toxiceffect."
Top de-bunking.
Thanks so much i was thinking about this guy yesterday lol
After the highlighted portion @:40 it says "after vaccination without evidence of alternative cause." Walking, running, and weightlifting would be considered alternative causes. "3participants were informed, asked to avoid strenuous exercise in order to minimize additional strain of the myocardium and associated cardiomyocyte injury" pg.3.
Yes. Now consider that carefully: strenuous exercise can raise troponin levels to the same extent as a booster vaccination. Does this mean you should shout "there's a fire!" when the same smoke can happen after exercise?
@@Marco-it2mr I appreciate the follow-up and I understand where I went wrong as I thought Dr. Wilson was critiquing the study Dr. Campbell referenced. But instead he was saying, as you pointed out, that exercise can cause similar myocardial injury so perhaps where there is smoke there is no fire in this case.
I will add that I think both readings of the study are disingenuous though. Dr. Wilson compares the damage to a brisk walk, you'd have to be horribly out of shape and/or morbidly obese to sustain that level of damage from a walk. He also says "slight increases in troponin", but the study clearly indicates "acute" levels indicated severe or intense.
Dr. Campbell compares it, more accurately, to running a marathon and the study indicates controlled for "strenuous exercise" that could cause similar damage.
Dr. Campbell's point is that myocardial damage was more prevalent than originally thought and
1) patients should have been informed of that potentiality
2) there is best practice to avoid exercise after myocardial injury and that was not discussed.
When I got my vaccine I was not told to avoid exercise and when I asked my doctor about it he said I should be fine the next day. I have run marathons and I have competed in intense athletic activity. If I'd done something like that on day 3, when troponin T (hc-CTnT) was at its peak after vaccination that could have been a major issue.
Anyways, thanks for the reply and adding clarity. I still think Dr. Wilson should have taken the study more seriously instead of giving the least favorable interpretation and I agree Dr. Campbell was more hyperbolic than necessary.
The conclusion that, "vaccine-associated myocardial injury was more common than previously thought, being mild and transient, and more frequent in women versus men" is still a compelling finding.
@@zarbinsEhm...here's what happens if you run a marathon:
"Cardiac troponin I increased significantly from 14 ± 12 ng/L at baseline to 94 ± 102 ng/L post-race, with 69% of the participants demonstrating cardiac troponin I levels above the clinical cut-off value (40 ng/L) for an acute myocardial infarction. "
(2015 study).
NONE of the people in this vaccine study is in that range. So, are you warned every time you run a marathon that you will very likely get myocardial injury?
@@Marco-it2mr 22 people in that study were over the range of sex specific bounded upper limits of what qualifies for myocardial injury. That is where 1 in 35 came from and it is accurate Dr. Campbell clearly states the elevations were mild and only temporary. He didn't yell 'Fire', his point again is on transparency and informed consent.
"So, are you warned every time you run a marathon that you will very likely get myocardial injury?"
This is a well known fact amongst marathon runners and that is why significant rest and recuperation are highly suggested due to the compromised cardiovascular state you are in after running. Particularly for amateur runners that lack long distance experience.
Campbell's point at 12:08 is that those in the test cohort "knew they had elevated troponin and knew not to exercise and that makes all the difference in the world" You may not find this significant but many will.
I was conciliatory in my first reply and appreciate the dialogue.
PLEASE ADDRESS THIS CONFLICT ASAP: According to John Campbell (and from what I understand from the research) the subjects in the study who might have raised troponin levels from other causes (like running and other possibilities) were excluded from the study. The researchers used a well-matched control cohort which allowed for comparison in outcomes. Also, there were similar studies from Thailand and Israel with more or less the same results (the number of shots differed). Study Conclusion: "...myocardial injury was found to be much more common than previously thought. It occurred in one out of 35 persons, was mild and transient, and more frequent in women versus men."
It's an experimental quackcine. It's dangerously causing heart damage. Vax-worshippers will deny, downplay, make excuses, gaslight, smear truth-tellers...
ua-cam.com/video/V5S-j8oQQ1c/v-deo.html
@@winnmatthews Hello anti-vaxxer! Just a friendly reminder that you're no different from the flat earth community, troll on nutter!
@@muzikgod Keep joking and telling yourself whatever makes you feel good about the drugs that you were dupe into getting, and be sure to enjoy whatever it is that you think you get out of having them in your body!
In the meantime, those of us that won't be participating are all doing just fine with no problems and zero regrets... and everyone knows it too.
🤗
@@muzikgod When outright lies, lame AF jokes, and shit talking are all that you have left to contribute to the discussion... it means that you lost.
😉
Perhaps the raised troponin levels point to subclinical damage that might be cumulative. A true scientist would use this finding as a call for further investigation, especially if this platform is to be used in the future.
Oh look, its the fake doctor "in practice" who ran away in the last thread he tried.
You had this explained to you already. If you're a real physician, you know a single slightly elevated troponin level means nothing. It's not treated. It's not a diagnosis. You're not hospitalized for it. You have to have sequential elevated troponins, with signs and symptoms. The study stated no one suffered any MACEs and no one had an abnormal EKG. If you're actually in the medical field, you should know all this.
If it was subclinical myocarditis it would most likely heal completely anyway. Unless you're getting a vaccine every few days, it wouldn't have a chance to cause cumulative damage.
Why aren't you worried about the cumulative damage of multiple covid infections?
You're clutching at straws trying to find reason to claim the vaccine is dangerous.
@@diandian9827 Oh, look the ultracrepidarian middle school teacher is at it again. What the OP said is completely reasonable. The only people that are against further study are the cult.
@@philo3479 You're a middle school teacher? I respect them a lot, but usually they read better than what you just demonstrated.
Point out where in my post I stated I was "against further study". Then sit down and STFU.
@@diandian9827 The fact you have the gall to think you can educate a physician because you can google is beyond delusional arrogance. Your words demonstrate you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. But your side loves beclowning itself so strong work.
Some docs say 'vary rare', to youtubers saying 'doesn't happen at all.'
JC's behavior could be described as "culpable harm through deliberate misinformation." It may not fit the definitions of mass murder or serial killing, but it still involves significant harm caused intentionally.
Maybe a court will order him to pay a $30 billion fine like someone else we know who pushes their product in suspicous ways that destroy trust.
@@NathansHVAC Are you talking about Twitter?
@@muzikgodI'm sure pharma would like to fine twitter $30 billion for allowing their marking to be debunked with science. But, I"m talking about pharma paying $30 billion in court ordered fines over the last 15 years for doing a whole bunch of shady stuff.
Dreaming. Pfizer and Moderna are the villains here, not the good Dr John Campbell.
How you people are balls deep in love with an experimental vaccine that has no long term safety profile and has a lot of safety issues is mind blowing 🤯
Think about it, a gigantic pharma company that rushed a totally new type of “vaccine” and rolled it out globally, used the media to squash any voices that dare question the official narrative. You guys are in way over your head. You have no idea of the damage done to medical institutions and trust in science.
@@Mark_Jacobson81 Still not experimental. Love how you anti-vaxxers do nothing but lie. It's all due to your lack of an education in science, though.
You should also respond to Campbell's gay/monkeypox conspiracy theory. It was a fringe conspiracy at first, but Campbell's video made it explode.
How is it a conspiracy theory? It mostly affected men who have sex with men
Unbelievable that Campbells channel persists despite his constant lies for 2 years. He’s nearly at 3M subs. Obscene. Stupidity sells.
right wing media and conspiracy stuff is pretty interesting. makes me wonder how many of those subs are 'bots' vs lost souls looking for someone to tell them they're conspiracy theories are right.
@@paxt17 judging from the comments, its definitely the latter. never underestimate stupidity, especially in the UK and US.
His channel was stagnating.
Then took off after the untruths started.
@@juliusbrillor here in Australia
Myocardial infarction and myocarditis are two different medical conditions that affect the heart, although they share some similarities in their names.
Myocardial Infarction (MI):
Also known as a heart attack, myocardial infarction occurs when there is a sudden blockage of blood flow to a part of the heart muscle (myocardium). This blockage is usually caused by a blood clot that forms in a coronary artery, which supplies oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle.
The lack of blood flow and oxygen can lead to damage or death of the heart muscle cells in the affected area. This can result in chest pain or discomfort, shortness of breath, and other symptoms.
Myocardial infarction is a medical emergency and requires immediate medical attention. Treatment typically involves restoring blood flow to the affected artery, often with procedures like angioplasty and stent placement.
Myocarditis:
Myocarditis is a condition characterized by inflammation of the myocardium, the heart muscle. This inflammation can be caused by infections (such as viruses), autoimmune diseases, certain medications, or other factors.
Myocarditis can lead to a wide range of symptoms, including chest pain, fatigue, palpitations, shortness of breath, and even heart failure in severe cases.
Diagnosis of myocarditis often involves a combination of medical history, physical examination, blood tests, imaging studies (such as echocardiography or MRI), and sometimes a biopsy of heart tissue.
Treatment for myocarditis depends on the underlying cause but may involve rest, medications to reduce inflammation and manage symptoms, and addressing the specific cause if identified.
In summary, the main difference between myocardial infarction (heart attack) and myocarditis is their underlying cause and mechanism. Myocardial infarction is primarily caused by a blocked coronary artery leading to a lack of blood flow, while myocarditis is an inflammatory condition that can have various causes. Both conditions can affect the heart muscle and may present with similar symptoms, but their treatment and management differ. Heart attack is typically a medical emergency requiring immediate intervention, whereas myocarditis may be managed differently based on its cause and severity.
my father had a heart post vaccination attack due to ventricular fibrilation, can you debunk his condition? If anyones spreading misinformation its you
C91Vaccine are safe?
I didn't take any one it is bad or good ?
❤❤❤
I had five shots of the covid vaccine and now have myocarditis, pericarditis, multiple schlerosis, gone blind, developed autism, and metal objects stick to me. 😂😂
This is the type of comment you generally find on Dr Campbells imagination comment section.
Yeah, but has your Wifi reception improved? That what makes it all worthwhile!
I never made it til Christmas. ,
Omg you were lucky it took me 7 shots to get all them and I lived in a paper bag in the middle of the road.
That just means the vaccine is working.
Didn't JC say in his video that all other causes of increased troponin were ruled out, never said what they were though. 🙃
There were 22 out of the 777 in the prospective cohort study which were adjudicated to have transient myocardial injury. They never performed a CMR imaging analysis 30 to 60 days post injury, necessary to ascertain if the transient mild damage to the myocardial tissues resulted in scarring. Expert opinion is therefore speculative although the lower troponin levels than usually associated with myocardial infarction may be the reasoning behind calling the injury, mild and transient.
I want to get a cmr image. I did a nuclear stress test already. I was horrified how radioactive I became. Never again. I was setting gieger counters off for 3 days.
@@NathansHVAC Not much choice when you don't know what is wrong without a diagnosis.
You are lying and didn't watch John Campbell's video nor read the study. The study explicitly states that they excluded participants who had received a heart surgery, had a cardiac event or participated in exercise before the study.
I had loads of myocarditis after the vaccine, absolutely riddled with it. So much the doctor couldn't believe it. So did all my friends, and their friends, and their mums.
Myself and 14 other people I know all died from the vaccine. It's not a joke!
And you’re a liar
Apparently.
My entire family was wiped out from exploding hearts just seconds after injection.
Damn! A nice easy one for you then! 😂 I see that mook Weinerstein has also jumped on this absolute nonsense.
So exercise may produce higher than normal Troponin levels? Doesn’t prove or disprove anything even though you’re suggesting that it’s the reason why 1 in 35 had raised levels. Did they also have other tests done to indicate this or not?
"even though you’re suggesting that it’s the reason" - that isn't what he is doing. He is saying that such level alone aren't call for concern.
@@aq9415 Exactly. And not one antivaxxer apparently could get that out of this 1 minute presentation.
What happens to the guy who gets vaccine injured in this way and then runs a marathon the next day? Enquiring minds want to know 🧐
No one got injured.
He wins the race because the medicine is awesome. You know. High T levels like Lance armstrong.
JC said yesterday that he’d been ‘vaccine injured’. What’s that all about? I did ask on his channel but I didn’t get a reply.
I'm not sure on jc. Jimmy Dore is neck pain. Malone is high blood pressure.
Malhotra links his deeead father.
"Doctor" John is terrible. He comes across as the grandpa, and I hope he *thinks* he's doing good, but he's just not. It's really disappointing because otherwise, I'd have a beer with him, well, not now, but someday, well, maybe...
He’s not even an MD, but is happy for his audience to think that he is. He’s a Nursing Clinician with a good reputation in this field but his knowledge of scientific research is not so good. I’m not sure if he has a PhD or an honorary award. He’s no medical Doctor that’s for sure.
You criticise Dr John, but I have to say his ‘funny faces in the inset’ game is the best on UA-cam. I’m beginning to believe in the lab leak conspiracy just on the basis of his excellent gurning alone.
You are right about his gurning; he could compete professionally.
So people at rest have the same levels of that protein as healthy people doing physical effort.... Thanks for the clarification (not sarcastic).
Uhhhhh he explained all that in rhe video?
I thought you weren't supposed to exercise for a few days after getting a vaccine. As this study was done on people working in healthcare, surely most of them would not have done high intensity exercise after getting vaccinated?
I think you misunderstand. The point isn't that the higher T levels were caused by people exercising after getting vaxed - but that higher T levels in itself doesn't mean anything significant. You likely have higher T levels after going for a walk. Do you think going for a walk causes myocardotis?
@@joshuabrooks91 According to Marshall et al. (2020), which is a study Dr. Wilson cited in this video, you are, in fact, not more likely to have higher troponin levels after low intensity exercise: “Troponin was elevated after moderate- and high-intensity exercise (1-way ANOVA, P
Is John Campbell an anti-vax grifter?
Dumbest question of the day.
Well someone had to ask it.
@@MessiahNonEstHey Skidmark, answer it. You don't seem to get the obvious.
@@jaykanta4326 Another incarnation?
@@jaykanta4326 It's obvious you asked the question, even knew it was the dumbest question to ask: asked it anyway.
What's your connection with Eurofins and their connection to the Moderna vaccine? Thanks in advance
The truth always brings about a silence to the bullsh!tters
Hello Phoney Cream Puff. What good fortune having to come back to this video. I get to see a troII failing miserably!
I mean - asking rhetorical questions in a 3 week old video, that no one is looking at. And then answering it yourself. Oh dear ....
Why do you cherry pick videos, example this one on JC? Even if he his wrong on this one this will not mean he or his guests are wrong on other more important videos.
He is wrong almost every week
ua-cam.com/video/Q6RknYdfKdQ/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/BvAAz4k20MI/v-deo.html
I can bring up many other times
When I grow up I want to be like Dr. Wilson.