There is the myocarditis link, tail of the bell curve rates. In young men it typically resolves, but again, outliers exist. That said, last check it happens more often, statistically, after getting COVID in the wild. There’s also been a link of men under 40 with a-fib, not after the shot, but after having COVID, organically. Do your own deep dove on afib. Capturing afib in testing can be difficult because people can move in and out of that rhythm between feeling symptoms and getting to the doctor for testing. It’s caught in hospital more often because the testing can be sent to the bedside within minutes of feeling symptoms.
And two things can happen organically at the same time and be completely unrelated. We tend to blame the new, external event, hence the need for statistics. There was a “link between breast implants and autoimmune disorders” disproved back in the 90s. People wanted to blame the new, external thing: the breast implant. Turns out, statistically, the rates of autoimmune, with or without breast implants, were the same.
The flu thing, I’m skeptical, since most flu is done within 5 days. Most, outliers exist. Unless you’re getting reports from people who can’t stop feeling bad about feeling bad for days after an illness.
As an older adult, chicken pox is harder to handle, typically. Again, outliers exist. Shingles is downright painful, burning painful, by most accounts.
This is all talk your provider territory, not get your info from random dipshits on Lemmy or Reddit.
There is the myocarditis link, tail of the bell curve rates. In young men it typically resolves, but again, outliers exist. That said, last check it happens more often, statistically, after getting COVID in the wild. There’s also been a link of men under 40 with a-fib, not after the shot, but after having COVID, organically. Do your own deep dove on afib. Capturing afib in testing can be difficult because people can move in and out of that rhythm between feeling symptoms and getting to the doctor for testing. It’s caught in hospital more often because the testing can be sent to the bedside within minutes of feeling symptoms.
And two things can happen organically at the same time and be completely unrelated. We tend to blame the new, external event, hence the need for statistics. There was a “link between breast implants and autoimmune disorders” disproved back in the 90s. People wanted to blame the new, external thing: the breast implant. Turns out, statistically, the rates of autoimmune, with or without breast implants, were the same.
The flu thing, I’m skeptical, since most flu is done within 5 days. Most, outliers exist. Unless you’re getting reports from people who can’t stop feeling bad about feeling bad for days after an illness.
As an older adult, chicken pox is harder to handle, typically. Again, outliers exist. Shingles is downright painful, burning painful, by most accounts.
This is all talk your provider territory, not get your info from random dipshits on Lemmy or Reddit.