Microbiologist and immunologist Muazzam M. Sheriff and colleagues at Ibn Sina National College for Medical Studies and King Faisal General Hospital noted that more than a quarter of covid injection recipients suffered some cardiac complication after getting the mRNA variety of shot, made by either Pfizer and BioNTech or Moderna.
Published in the medical journal Cureus in January, the study investigated the results of a survey regarding self-reported physician-diagnosed cardiac complications post mRNA vaccination in Saudi Arabia.
“Due to the scarcity of specific vaccine safety data, the study sought to provide data supporting public awareness and recommendations for global public health practices,” the authors wrote.
It looked at 804 participants, 379 of whom are men and 425 of whom are women. The majority of them (93%) received at least one dose of an mRNA shot.
About 40 per cent of the participants took just one injection, meaning they did not complete even the initial two-shot series, let alone get any “booster” injections.
Nearly 10 per cent of the participants had to receive medical care for their injuries for more than 12 months while 7 per cent were undergoing some kind of continuous and ongoing treatment at the time of the survey.
The study found that 27 per cent reported cardiac complications post-covid injection. Nearly 15 per cent of mRNA injection recipients reported experiencing heart-related symptoms within one month of injection, while others reported heart problems upwards of a year or more after doing the deed.
As reported by Children’s Health Defense, Dr. Peter McCullough said nearly 16 per cent of all covid injection recipients who developed cardiovascular symptoms had to be rushed to a critical care unit for treatment – that is how bad their symptoms were.
“More than half of subjects indicated they were influenced by a healthcare professional or government agency to get vaccinated,” Dr. McCullough is quoted as saying. “Never in recent times has there been such a cardiotoxic vaccine released on the public.”