21-year old female model, Claire Bridges suffered serious injuries allegedly because of COVID-19 infection. Below is the article by Daily Mail:
A 21-year-old model and avid rock climber who had both of her legs amputated due to COVID-19 complications has finally gone home from the hospital after two months.
Claire Bridges from St. Petersburg, Florida was fully vaccinated when she tested positive for COVID-19 in early January.
But having been born with a congenital heart condition, her condition soon worsened, and on January 16 she was admitted to a Tampa hospital and diagnosed with COVID-19 myocarditis, cyanotic, acidosis, rhabdomyolysis, and mild pneumonia.
Restricted blood flow had caused damage to her legs, which had to be amputated.
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Her mother said that she was sent home from the emergency room the first time she went, but she returned with 'extreme leg pain' the next day — and again, she was sent home.The third time she went to the hospital, her condition was critical, and she coded three times before undergoing a four-hour surgery to place tandem heart life support.
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Before hospitalization, she went to emergency room because of "extreme leg pain". Eventually, her legs had to be amputated because of "restricted blood flow". There must have been blood clot in her legs.
According to the article, she was born with a heart condition and had a heart surgery at age 9. But after that she was so healthy she became a rock climber.
In addition to myocarditis, another serious problem was rhabdomyolysis. The article briefly explains what rhabdomyolysis is.
According to the CDC, 'rhabdomyolysis (often called rhabdo) is a serious medical condition that can be fatal or result in permanent disability.'
'[The condition] occurs when damaged muscle tissue releases its proteins and electrolytes into the blood,' the description explains. 'These substances can damage the heart and kidneys and cause permanent disability or even death.'
It's kind of strange that respiratory virus can cause myocarditis and rhabdomyolysis.
I visited OpenVAERS website and searched for these 2 symptoms:
https://openvaers.com/covid-data/covid-reports
Searching for myocarditis from COVID-19 vaccine adverse event reports gives you 13,963 cases. Searching for rhabdomyolysis gives you 549 cases.
If you search them from all the vaccine(COVID-19 and others) adverse events combined(from 1990 to 2022), you get 14,588 myocarditis cases and 798 rhabdomyolysis cases.
Comparing the above numbers, it's obvious majority of those adverse events comes from COVID-19 vaccine. Clair Bridges' injuries could be caused by COVID-19 infection, vaccine, or both.
I checked if there are similar cases, and found 2 articles. First, let's look at another article by Daily Mail:
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Jummai Nache, a medical assistant from Minneapolis, received the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on February 1.A few days later on February 6, her husband, Philip, took her to urgent care after she felt chest pains.
A day later, she tested positive for COVID-19, and her condition quickly deteriorated, leading to hospitalization and eventual amputation.
Philip is now searching for answers to the true cause of his wife's condition.
'Jummai and I were shocked when we received the result that she was Covid-19 positive because she had not manifested any symptom before taking the shot,' Philip wrote in a letter attached to a GoFundMe for the couple.
'But we later accepted that perhaps, the virus and the vaccine together contributed to the adverse reaction on her body based on the report of the Infectious Disease physician that Jummai was asymptomatic.'
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He said that his wife suffered from an arterial blood clot, respiratory disease, cardiomyopathy (heart muscle disease), anemia, ischemia and multiple inflammatory syndrome (MIS) - a condition where multiple organs in the body become inflamed.
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She had chest pains after vaccination, and tested positive for COVID-19 the next day without any COVID-19 symptom. Then her condition quickly worsened, leading to amputation of her legs.
And, here is another article by Bangkok Post in Thailand:
Student loses leg after second cross-jab, then dies
A student who developed blood clots after getting her second Covid-19 vaccine shot and her left leg was amputated has since died of a haemorrhagic stroke after brain surgery.
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She had been inoculated first with the Sinovac vaccine, and then given AstraZeneca as her second dose.
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She complained of a fever and chest pains about three days later, her classmate Anupong said. She went to see a doctor at Phangnga Hospital, who diagnosed her with a bladder infection.Ketsiree was later rushed back to the hospital after she experienced severe pain in her left leg. She was referred to Surat Thani Hospital, where an X-ray revealed blood clots that required urgent surgery.
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She had fever and chest pains after vaccination. A few days later severe pain in her left leg, leading to amputation. After that, she died of stroke.
Can you see similarities among the above articles? I can't help but think that something's wrong with COVID-19 vaccine.