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Cardiac Adverse Events after Vaccination-A Systematic Review

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10050700

Keywords

myocarditis; vaccination; pericarditis; myocardial infarction; adverse events

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The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System database was used to study adverse events following different vaccines. The study found that adverse events after influenza vaccination were more common in older females, adverse events after COVID-19 vaccination were more common in males and often occurred after the second dose, and adverse events after smallpox vaccination were more common in younger males and had a later onset of symptoms. The most reported adverse event was myopericarditis.
The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System database has been used to report adverse events following several vaccines. We studied the patient population predisposed to such reactions and how these reactions differ with respect to the vaccine type. We searched the electronic databases PubMed, EMBASE, and Scopus up to 9 July 2021 for any study describing cardiac adverse events attributed to the vaccination. A total of 56 studies met the criteria comprising 340 patients. There were 20 studies describing cardiac adverse events following smallpox vaccination, 11 studies describing adverse events after influenza vaccination, and 18 studies describing adverse events after COVID-19 vaccination. There was a total of six studies describing cardiac adverse events after the pneumococcal vaccine, tetanus toxoid, cholera vaccine, and rabies vaccine. Adverse events following influenza vaccination occurred more commonly in older females within an average duration of four days from vaccination. Pericardial involvement was the most reported adverse event. Adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination happened at a mean age of 42.7 years, more commonly in males, and mostly after a second dose. Adverse events following smallpox vaccination occurred more commonly in younger males, with an average onset of symptoms from vaccination around 16.6 days. Adverse events were mostly myopericarditis; however, the acute coronary syndrome has been reported with some vaccines.

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