[Libre-soc-dev] dont know what to fo
Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
lkcl at lkcl.net
Mon Jan 12 17:34:26 GMT 2026
On Sunday, January 11, 2026, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <lkcl at lkcl.net>
wrote:
> BP 96 / 69 hr 64 chest pain difficulty breathing
> dizzy getting to A&E
>
>
BP stayed low until getting to A&E, where it went
"normal" but my eyes went crossed and I was
unable to get up out of the triage chair.
(eyes crossed indicates life-threatening hypoxia
from a stroke)
BP rose to 163/110 within 10 minutes, "drowning"
feeling occurred, anaphylaxis occurred and cleared
in appx 5 minutes after a massive amount of flegm
coughed up. I frequently had to jam my fingers hard
around my windpipe but it resulted in more flegm
building up. I remember sweating profusely just
like you do on throwing up, and that's when the
symptoms all went away.
the same sequence occurred about 15
minutes later, except this time I couldn't move,
which was extremely frightening as the A&E staff
stood back waiting to see what happened rather
than take any action.
my mouth filled up with saliva and flegm, as I was
trapped on my side against the rail of the trolley,
unable to move.
I was trying not to choke to death.
within about 4 minutes of sobbing at being unable
to move and at such a risk of death I was able
to move again, the anaphylaxis stopped, and
BP readings showed "normal" again.
the hypothesis that fits the events is that tiredness
when still recovering from another infection
caused oxidative stress that triggered cholesterol
and biotoxin release, which lowered my BP (putting
me into toxic shock)
the cholesterol built up and caused an arterial
blockage. the stress of getting to A&E did not
help, and it was long enough that hypoxia occurred,
and the BP spiked as the cholesterol built up.
the anaphylaxis occurred as the toxins also built
up, as an emergency release valve under
hypertension. likewise the sweating. however the
second time was more serious: the blockage was
also in the area damaged by ischemic stroke,
possibly also the biotoxins in the blood affected
the still-repairing neural structures surrounding
the "hole"
there was a peer-reviewed journal
about this phenomenon, where electrical activity
can be hampered by a vicious cycle of glial cells
doing their job on detection of reduced electrical
activity, but getting themselves damaged: one
of the characteristics of autism is that microglia
damage have massive detrimental consequences
weeks after the initial assault.
--
---
geometry: without it life is pointless
the fibonacci series: easy as 1 1 2 3
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