(Watch the full interview here)
Written by Taylor Hudak
Prof. Burkhardt observed a subarachnoid hemorrhage without aneurysm in a 29 year-old male, who received one dose of AstraZeneca and one dose of Pfizer. He died 46 days after the second injection. This typically very rare condition was considered to be the obvious and immediate cause of death.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage is caused by structural defects of the brain vessels, most often aneurysms. However, the patient presented with no such defects nor did he have any other known illnesses or conditions prior to injection.
The brain is covered by a very delicate skin, and inside there are small vessels, which supply blood to the brain.
The image above shows the surface of the brain. On the left side of the image, one can see the subarachnoid membrane and the small vessel (yellow).
The damaged vessel is the circle on the right. The blood spilled into the brain groove (green) between two brain convolutions and into the space between the brain and the meninges (the connective tissue layers which enwrap the brain).
However, the circumference of this vessel appears intact, which means that the site of the rupture must have been either above or below the plane of this tissue section.
“This type of subarachnoid bleeding may occur in younger persons, but it is caused by a genetic defect of the larger vessels of the brain. And this was not the case in this patient. It was not found. He had a diffused hemorrhage from inflamed and partly destroyed smaller vessels.”
Shortly before death, the patient experienced convulsions and went unconscious. Efforts to revive him in the hospital were unsuccessful.
Vaccine-damage as the cause of death?
When Prof. Burkhardt was asked what led him to determine that the vaccine was likely the cause of the patient’s death, he revealed that this patient had several unusual complications.
“In addition to these lesions in the brain, we found mild myocarditis, which would be very unusual that you would have a brain hemorrhage and myocarditis.”
Prof. Burkhardt further explains that the patient had endothelial lesions — damage and destruction to endothelium in the brain and the myocardium (heart muscle).
“The assumption that this is a toxic effect mediated by the spike protein is made further very probable because we could show the spike protein in these lesions. And by the way, this is a person whom we found spike protein in the testes — in the spermatogenic cells.”
In summary, Prof. Burkhardt concludes by stating that this patient did not die of a brain aneurysm but he died of multiple lesions, which are probably caused by the same toxic agent.