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Did Side Effects from a COVID Vaccine Force a Soccer Star to Retire?

Why do some people think that side effects from a COVID vaccine forced a soccer star to retire from the game?

Rikke Sevecke did not retire from soccer because of the side effects of a COVID vaccine.
Rikke Sevecke has arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy – a genetic/congenital heart condition.

The usual suspects…

Did Side Effects from a COVID Vaccine Force a Soccer Star to Retire?

Folks like Steve Kirsch and William Makis and other anti-vaccine influencers have been pushing propaganda about sudden death in athletes, turbo cancers, and clots.

Rikke Sevecke, 27, announced her retirement from football in January 2024 due to a heart condition detected in October 2023.

Rikke Sevecke: “We can’t take chances with players’ health – there needs to be a change”

So what’s the true story here?

“I had to do further tests on the back of it, and it was confirmed in October that I have ARVC – arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. In the worst case, it can result in a cardiac arrest. Turns out it’s something I have had my whole life.”

Rikke Sevecke: “We can’t take chances with players’ health – there needs to be a change”

Although she had been screened with EKGs and other tests before, she was moving to a new club in Italy that required an exercise test with ECG monitoring.

This stress test detected her heart condition.

It was congenital – something she was born with.

“Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is a disease of the heart muscle. In this disease, fatty fibrous tissue replaces normal heart muscle. This interrupts normal electrical signals in the heart and may cause irregular and potentially life-threatening heart rhythms. The heart also becomes weaker over time leading to heart failure.”

What is arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy?

It was not caused by the COVID vaccine or any other vaccine.

“ARVC results from a genetic defect. Genes are part of your DNA, the material passed down from parents to children. With this genetic defect, proteins that normally hold the muscle cells together don’t develop correctly. This allows the muscle cells to detach and die. When this happens, normal heart tissue is replaced with fatty or fibrous tissue.”

What is arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy?

ARVC can be hard to diagnose, as we have seen, often requiring multiple tests, which is why it wasn’t detected earlier.

Fortunately, there are treatments, but people with this condition do have to limit competitive physical activity.

And that is why Rikke Sevecke had to quit playing soccer.

Again, it was not because she had received a COVID vaccine.

So don’t listen to folks like Steve Kirsch who are trying to blame anything and everything on COVID vaccines to scare you away from getting vaccinated and protected.

“Although most of those with ARVC do not show any symptoms, the condition causes 15%-25% of heart-related deaths in people under 35. “

Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy

But maybe we should thank Kirsch for raising awareness of Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy. A genetic disorder that is a common cause of sudden deaths in young people! Sudden deaths that Kirsch and others often blame on COVID vaccines.

With his post, Steve Kirsch also demonstrates how easily these folks create their anti-vaccine propaganda.

Rikke Sevecke retired from soccer nearly four months ago. And posted her explanation over six weeks ago. An explanation that Kirsch and Makis either didn’t take the time to look for or ignored…

More on COVID Vaccine Side Effects

Last Updated on May 2, 2024

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