Anyone using the term 'mild' when referring to pericarditis or myocarditis is trying to sooth concerned souls probably because the association mandated the shots.
I was told by a heart transplant surgeon I worked for 20 years ago the number one leading cause of heart replacement was pericardium infection.
It is a leading indicator of future more serious outcomes like transplant. The surgeon I worked with said most often the patients he performs transplants on had pericarditis in their past. He only performed 2000 or so surgeries as I recall so maybe he didn't know what he was talking about.
So what you are saying is Heart and Stroke foundation advises you ignore pericarditis as it will often "get better in a few days on its own".
That's your advice? Are you saying people should ignore a possible viral infection? I wouldn't ever say that - you may want to ask the H&S folks to stand behind that statement.
Pericarditis is never a 'mild' condition.
It can kill you.
Anyone using the term 'mild' when referring to pericarditis or myocarditis is trying to sooth concerned souls probably because the association mandated the shots.
I was told by a heart transplant surgeon I worked for 20 years ago the number one leading cause of heart replacement was pericardium infection.
Show us where someone has died of pericarditis caused by a covid vaccine.
People die from pericarditis as a leading indicator. There is no such thing as a 'mild' case, unless you are trying to cover something up.
https://www.physiciansweekly.com/pericarditis-tied-to-mortality-morbidity-risks/
It is a leading indicator of future more serious outcomes like transplant. The surgeon I worked with said most often the patients he performs transplants on had pericarditis in their past. He only performed 2000 or so surgeries as I recall so maybe he didn't know what he was talking about.
... says some anonymous poster on some obscure social media forum.
Meanwhile the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada says:
"Most cases of pericarditis are mild and get better on their own in a few days" https://www.heartandstroke.ca/heart-disease/conditions/pericarditis
Who are you going to believe folks?
Don't get your medical advice from anonymous people on social media.
So what you are saying is Heart and Stroke foundation advises you ignore pericarditis as it will often "get better in a few days on its own".
That's your advice? Are you saying people should ignore a possible viral infection? I wouldn't ever say that - you may want to ask the H&S folks to stand behind that statement.