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Clarke's avatar

I worked with vascular surgeons for 24 years and quit prior to covid so all our patients were unvaccinated insofar as covid. I have seen clots primarily in the lower extremities longer that 1 foot but mostly on ultrasound. In most cases anticoagulation is used. In cases where clot removal or surgical thrombectomy is needed the clot would not come out as an as intact piece or unit. It would break up into pieces. So, as I commented below, I have never seen anything resembling these "fibrous" clots in operating room and I have no idea what they are.

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Doug Cragoe's avatar

But was anticoagulation used before the removal of a long clot? Could anticoagulation have weakened the clot so it came out in pieces? Did the pieces that came out look anything like the long clots taken out of live people?

We need to know more details about how these clots were found. COVID and COVID shots both cause clotting.

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Clarke's avatar

The expert on this is Dr. Peter Mccullogh not me. He has established the mechanism behind covid shots and blood clotting. The spike protein produced by the mrna covid shot is not the same as covid and far more thrombogenic. It is also interesting that soccer players in Europe that had covid prior to the rollout of the shot were not dropping dead. After the rollout of the covid shots over 800 young European athletes have died suddenly, and all were jabbed

Most on the field some in their sleep

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