reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A speaker describes a multi-site study involving scientists in Houston, New York City, and Oxford, England. They analyzed data from 7,000 patients, of which 1,000 were PET-scanned for illnesses unrelated to myocarditis or heart disease; the heart was still examined as part of the PET scans. From the 1,000 patients, two-thirds were vaccinated and one-third were unvaccinated, forming the study group for comparison.
According to the account, the two-thirds vaccinated subgroup (about 700 people) showed the heart working 46 percent harder for six to seven months after receiving the double vaccine dose. The speaker notes that as a cardiologist, a heart working 15 percent harder under any circumstance or drug would be alarming, implying that a sustained 46–50 percent increase is dangerous. The vaccinated group allegedly experienced 18,000,000 heartbeats with the heart exerting near-50 percent more effort than normal during this period.
In contrast, the non-vaccinated group who were PET-scanned for other reasons reportedly did not show an increase in FDG uptake or myocardial effort; their heart activity remained where it should be, with no extra strain observed.
The speaker asserts that this finding constitutes clear evidence that vaccination causes significant long-term strain on the heart in this cohort, stating, “There are folks without myocarditis. But they had myocardial effort. Myocardial effort up 46 to 50%.” The conclusion drawn is that vaccines are causing substantial and prolonged heart workload.
A reference is made to Nakahara as a key paper relevant to the discussion, described as “a very, very important paper.” The discussion suggests that the Nakahara findings, along with the described PET-scan data, constitute a strong argument about cardiac effects following vaccination, framing the vaccination strategy as potentially overlooking this cardiac impact.
Note: The summary preserves the specific figures and statements as presented in the transcript, including the claim that the vaccinated group showed a 46–50% increase in myocardial effort for about six months post-vaccination and that the non-vaccinated group did not demonstrate such an increase.