have those symptoms and intervene. sooner you recognize this and intervene, lower the chances of anxiety and depression and health issues that follow this. what is for, saying over here is that something about the trauma, that you would see, for example, wars are in the trauma, collapse of a building would be a trauma. now with stroke, when you lose the blindness, your heart rate, initial signs of stroke kicks in, that s the first trauma. then they go through the whole therapy with stroke. icu, monitor set up or afterwards, that puts pressure on them and post-stroke zone is when this really kicks in. even in the icu then, this could be kicking in. that s for because it is something called icu psychosis where we see a lot of patients after surgery or a stroke. and they may stay in the hospital for a long time. it is very interesting because they don t have a concept of
was sick during the evening and in the morning, i never called the ambulance a friend did, but i said you need to call an ambulance. i knew something severe was going on. once you got to the doctor, what was the diagnosis, prognosis, what was the treatment, what was said to you? well, i don t have a very clear memory of anything. in fact, i was in icu for six weeks and there s something called icu psychosis. that leads to a lot of memory loss. but my sisters have told me that what occurred is they said that i had less than 10% chance to survive. and i had kidney failure, the very next day, august 25th. and on october 5th, they amputated by legs below the knee and all my fingers were amputated. your twin sister was a god