Wauseon, OH: A high school athlete, Kaden Clymer, had six-foot-long blood clots removed from his legs, ending his football career.
According to a report from WTOL 11, doctors diagnosed Clymer with a condition called IVC Atresia but they “are still trying to figure out what happened to Kaden.”
From WOTL 11:
The night before the Wauseon Indians took to the field for their first Fall team practice, Clymer unexpectedly had to be taken to Toledo Children’s Hospital.
“His calves were swelled up four inches larger, in circumference, than they are now,” Maurine Clymer said. “So, he was very uncomfortable.”
Kaden Clymer added “I just wanted to go home honestly. I didn’t really care what they did to me, I just wanted to go home.”
Doctors diagnosed Clymer with a condition called IVC Atresia but are still undergoing tests to determine the cause and treatment moving forward. His path to recovery is far from over, re-gaining strength into his legs each day comes at a price.
“He gets shots in his stomach every day, twice a day, which is not something fun,” Maurine Clymer said. “I don’t enjoy giving them to him and I know he doesn’t like getting them. Yet, he does it with a smile and we appreciate that. It could’ve been so much worse.”
The rest can be read here:
Breaking Digest previously reported that embalmers are finding “never seen before, long, rubbery, clots” inside of corpses since the implementation of the Covid vaccines.
According to one Alabama embalmer who has been treating corpses for over 20 years, the strange fibrous clots emerged in May of 2021, shortly after the Covid vaccines first became available to the public.
“It wasn’t until May or June of last year that I started to say, ‘something is really different about the blood’ and then later in September, I took my first picture, since I couldn’t come out with just one piece of evidence because what if it’s just a fluke?” Alabama embalmer Richard Hirschmann told 1819 News. “Now, I have been gathering evidence and I have pictures of over 100 cases. And it’s not stopping. It’s not slowing down.”
Watch: Embalmer Richard Hirschman