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Surviving the Impossible: Alternative Treatment for Brainstem Hemorrhage Gave her a Second Chance

brainstem hemorrhage

After falling into a coma and being treated in the ICU and hospital for 2 months due to a brainstem hemorrhage, Mrs. D is now able to teach again at the university.

 

At the end of October 2024, Mrs. D experienced a severe headache and was unable to get up, eventually falling into a coma and being admitted to the ICU. CT scan and MRI results revealed a hemorrhage in the brainstem. The doctors diagnosed her with a cavernoma, a blood vessel abnormality that causes blood to pool in dilated vessels, leading to swelling that compresses the nerves, resulting in intense headaches, immobility, and coma.

 

Doctors stated that operating on the mass in the brainstem carried a very high risk. The size of the swollen blood vessel mass had increased from 1.6 cm to over 3 cm within 1.5 months. Since no further medical procedures could be performed aside from administering medication, Mrs. D was eventually brought home in a bedridden state, unable to get up, after 2 months of hospital care including 11 days in the ICU.

 

Looking for alternative options, Mrs. D’s husband, reached out to try ECCT treatment as Alternative Treatment for Brainstem Hemorrhage. Given that the mass was located in the brainstem, which is rich in vital nerves, Mrs. D was begin using the device for only 5 minutes, twice a day. After a week, the duration was increased to 10 minutes, then to 15 minutes over the first month. Remarkably, during treatment with the device, Mrs. D experienced no significant pain or nausea, and her headaches quickly subsided. She exhibited typical signs of detoxification similar to those seen in many cancer cases—such as sticky, strong-smelling sweat; cloudy and foul-smelling urine; and dark, sticky, foul-smelling, mucous stool.

 

After one month of using ECCT, Mrs. D was already able to sit up and begin learning to walk. Her previously double and unfocused vision had returned to normal. After two months of treatment with the ECCT, her overall condition had returned to normal, and she has even resumed teaching at the university.

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