coronavirus pandemic

CDC Investigating Heart Problems in Few Young Vaccine Recipients

The CDC said there have only been a few cases of myocarditis reported and it hasn’t determined if vaccines caused the heart condition.

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is looking into reports that a very small number of teenagers and young adults who got the COVID-19 vaccine may have experienced heart problems.

CDC officials posted guidance on its website for doctors to be alert to unusual heart symptoms called “myocarditis” among young people, who had just received their COVID shots.

“Myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle and it can result in fatigue, chest pain abnormal heart rhythms,” said Dr. Ted O’Connell, the Department Chair of Family and Community Medicine at Kaiser Permanente.

The symptoms seem to appear in teenagers and young adults about four days after their second dose of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine.

13-year-old Loraine Curtis of San Jose received her first COVID- shot Saturday and had just learned about the finding.

“It’s definitely concerning. But I do feel a little bit safer knowing that it didn’t happen to a lot of people,” she said.

Hayward resident Melissa Angervil said that now she is even more hesitant about her child getting the vaccine in the future.

“It’s scary because you really just don’t know what can happen and how their bodies are going to adjust to it,” she said.

The CDC said there have only been a few cases of myocarditis reported and it hasn’t determined if vaccines caused the heart condition.

“What’s important to know and to recognize is that the rates that we’re seeing of myocarditis are no higher than what we would experience normally. So, we don’t know if it’s associated with the vaccine or not,” O’Connell said.

O’Connell added that the cases that have been reported have all been mild.

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