Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Cardiac Arrest in Athletes, by Dr. Robert Malone

 "Is there a way to determine if a vaccine injury could have been involved?

  • Did his physicians conduct a full cardiac examination after inoculation and when was his last inoculation?

  • Did his physicians conduct a full cardiac examination recently (before the event)?

  • Was blood collected and stored at regular intervals? Were there tests run on that blood? Is the blood available for further testing?

  • Were there previous tests run to rule out myocarditis, such as d-dimer levels? The D-dimer is a protein fragment that is made when a blood clot dissolves in the body.

  • Blood tests. cardiac enzyme test can check for proteins related to heart muscle damage. What laboratory tests were run recently?

  • Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), chest X-ray, heart MRI (Cardiac MRI) or an Echocardiogram are all tests that could be used to help detect heart damage but most likely were not conducted recently.

  • Did he have any known pre-existing heart conditions?

It is unlikely that answers to these questions will become available.

So frankly, there is a very good chance that we will never know if he had a pre-existing condition, including a vaccine injury. That whatever his doctors conclude, we will all be playing “back-seat quarterback.”


This is why it is critically important for funding to become available to conduct studies in sudden deaths.

Having scientists and physicians trying to conduct such research on Saturday afternoon, after their funded research is finished for the week, is no way to get real answers."