- Joined
- Feb 24, 2019
Looks like that Chelsea girl is being discharged:
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Damn, she got the Morgan Special! I wonder if they also stopped at Chick-fil-a for her on the way home.
Chelsea says, "I have never said I have stiff person syndrome," yet she claims to have "stiff attacks." Make it make sense. I'm placing all bets on her never going to Johns Hopkins. I am not a doctor, but I don't see why another specialist (or even PCP) couldn't run some of the indicated tests before sending our stiff kween to another hospital. It sounds like the doctor(s) she sees don't buy it, but are like, "Yeah, no. If you're so dedicated to this diagnosis, go to xyz hospital, who has specialists who will also tell you that you don't have SPS."So this Stiff Person Syndrome she is trying to state she has actually is easily diagnosable. It also doesn't work the way she is pretending it does. It affects the trunk and limbs, not the jaw, etc. It also isn't non stop and would not bedbound someone 24/7 until it has progressed a lot.
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When called on saying she has it (which she does often on CaringBridge) she posted:
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At one point during her hospital stay, she was claiming that she could no longer sit up due to her stiff person syndrome and that PT was trying to work with her but she kept having stiff attacks. So that would explain the gurney transport. Not sure what she's planning on trying to "relearn" though since I'm sure it won't be a miraculous recovery.ETA: Chelsea posted a TikTok video about her discharge-via-ambulance/stretcher, wherein she is carted by EMTs into her house on a gurney. I'm not entirely sure why she didn't get the usual wheelchair > car > house treatment like all the normies. She even has her own wheelchair and ramp at home, and her mother's car must be accessible since mommy carts her around everywhere. She claims she's gone "10 steps backward" and "has a lot to relearn." Like what, Chelsea?
I hope this subhuman is never given IVG. It's lifesaving for certain autoimmune disorders but extremely expensive to make and a waste if you use it on someone without a condition that has evidence for IVG treating it. A cool thing about IVG is, unlike almost all other treatments for autoimmunity, it doesn't suppress your immune system. Normally people with those conditions take immune suppressing drugs that make deadly infections more likely.So this Stiff Person Syndrome she is trying to state she has actually is easily diagnosable. It also doesn't work the way she is pretending it does. It affects the trunk and limbs, not the jaw, etc. It also isn't non stop and would not bedbound someone 24/7 until it has progressed a lot.
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When called on saying she has it (which she does often on CaringBridge) she posted:
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I hope someone will correct me if this is wrong, but I think Chelsea has had at least one spinal tap which was negative for GAD antibodies. I believe that's why she's so pissed at Mayo - they diagnosed her with FND because her spinal tap was not abnormal.So this Stiff Person Syndrome she is trying to state she has actually is easily diagnosable. It also doesn't work the way she is pretending it does. It affects the trunk and limbs, not the jaw, etc. It also isn't non stop and would not bedbound someone 24/7 until it has progressed a lot.
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When called on saying she has it (which she does often on CaringBridge) she posted:
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Because munchies don't know the cool rare diseases.Stiff person syndrome literally has specific autoantibodies that are almost always only in people with the disorder. If she was tested negative she is 100 percent a faker. Why fake something that can be so easily disproven? Does she really expect people to believe she is a living casestudy medical marvel?
Treatment may include high dose diazepam. Ding ding ding there it is. Fucking knew it. All I needed to see.So this Stiff Person Syndrome she is trying to state she has actually is easily diagnosable. It also doesn't work the way she is pretending it does. It affects the trunk and limbs, not the jaw, etc. It also isn't non stop and would not bedbound someone 24/7 until it has progressed a lot.
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When called on saying she has it (which she does often on CaringBridge) she posted:
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She is trying to make a sternal rub sound like physical abuse. Sounds like a fair consequence of faking to me.Then I feel her fist slam down into my chest between my breasts multiple times over and over. I had a welt and a bruise for a couple days but it’s still sensitive to touch.
I thought the same thing. A sternal rub is a very good way to tell if someone is faking a seizure, and the fact that she spells it out like this actually hurts her argument that she isn’t.She is trying to make a sternal rub sound like physical abuse. Sounds like a fair consequence of faking to me.
There is something about the phrase "caring bridge" i really hate. Is it the name of the website or something she made up herself?Let's look at Chelsea's original FND diagnosis.
According to Chelsea, she had her first seizure on September 13 2019, which was also the day she moved into her mom's house. A week later she had another seizure and it snowballed from there until she was having 15-20 per day. She went to the hospital and, of course, her EEG showed no sign of epilepsy. She ended up being sent home and managed to arrange a visit to Mayo for October 30th. Oh, and HER MOM QUIT HER JOB TO BABYSIT CHELSEA.
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By October 31st, her speech has somehow turned into a horror show. She is completely silent for the first 30 seconds and after that it is fucking painful to listen to. At this point in time, she has an MRI scheduled and Mayo is suspecting FND. She doesn't seem overly upset about the FND yet and talks about the various therapies she would get for it.
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By November 12th, she is less happy with Mayo. She doesn't feel like she's being heard. She doesn't think it's safe for her to be home. (Sound familiar?) She wants a wheelchair because she can no longer walk. She complains about her doctor not arranging physical therapy yet.
Also, notice the "tremors" in her one hand that is visible, while the camera manages to be held reasonably still.
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By November 15th she has gotten her wheelchair but is complaining about the stigma of an FND diagnosis. One doctor wants to prioritize mental health treatment for her, but of course that's not what Chelsea wants.
November 21st, Chelsea gets her MRI while sedated. Predictably, she doesn't have any tremors or seizures while sedated. On November 22, she gets the (normal) MRI results and gets her definite FND diagnosis. Magically, the sedation from the day before just happens to wear off while her doctor is in the room and she's the worst she's ever been. And some whining about the difficulty in find an FND program.
November 27th, the day before Thanksgiving 2019, Chelsea calls 911 and has her ass carted off to the hospital for seizures so violent that she was injuring herself. They medicate her with the plan to ship her off to transitional care.
By December 4th, she's feeling well enough to bless the internet with more Caring Bridge bullshit. Her sister, Lacey, brought over her nephews two days before Thanksgiving, which was also the day their mom put up the Christmas tree. The stimulations was too much (or maybe it was her meds) and Chelsea spent the night having violent seizures. She woke up in severe pain and needs to use the restroom, but goes into a "freeze" when her mom rolls her onto her side. A "freeze" according to Chelsea, is "where her body fully locks up like a seizure but her mind is fully alert." Sounds an awful lot like the "stiff attacks" she'll have much later on. Anyway, they complain to Mayo and to Saint Mary's, but call 911 in the end.
Here's the interesting story: Chelsea claims she woke up from a seizure and EMTs were in the room. They were discussing her FND and non-epileptic seizures while Chelsea is still twitching. They get her onto the stretcher and roll her outside. According to Chelsea, she wasn't covered up so the cold triggered her to go into another "freeze" and one of the EMTs says "are you thinking what I’m thinking pseudo-seizure" and Chelsea knew she was in trouble. She then writes "I get inside the ambulance and I feel my arms slam down on the stretcher and I hear the woman yell at me “quit your shit I know you’re fucking faking“. Then I feel her fist slam down into my chest between my breasts multiple times over and over. I had a welt and a bruise for a couple days but it’s still sensitive to touch. I have neuropathy in my left leg and in my house we told everyone please don’t touch. It’s very painful. She took her hand and took her thumb and squeezed the nerve in my leg so hard I still to this day have a thumbprint in my leg." Chelsea then has another seizure, the EMT accuses her of faking and acts like she's going to break her finger, Chelsea's stats drop, and so they take her to the hospital.
More to come, of course, but she has a long history of being upset that people aren't interpreting her bullshit they way she wants them to and things escalating at convenient times.
She claims her doctors told her that they'd rather she had a brain tumor than FND because brain tumors are "easier to treat and cure".By November 15th she has gotten her wheelchair but is complaining about the stigma of an FND diagnosis. One doctor wants to prioritize mental health treatment for her, but of course that's not what Chelsea wants.
They won't let me do sternal rubs or precordial thumps anymore. ripShe is trying to make a sternal rub sound like physical abuse. Sounds like a fair consequence of faking to me.
She claims her doctors told her that they'd rather she had a brain tumor than FND because brain tumors are "easier to treat and cure".
Fuck this bitch. I don't say this lightly, but she deserves a glioblastoma.
@KiwiFarmerSimulator2021/Not Kellen, I can't quote you, but CaringBridge is a nonprofit organization that allows patients and caregivers to set up a simple blog style journal to keep loved ones updated about their own condition or that of their child. That's the "Bridge" part, I guess. It saves parents or other family members having to give the same, sometimes distressing, information over and over and over and theoretically helps mitigate misunderstandings and miscommunication. It was especially popular in the days before Facebook was a thing.
@KiwiFarmerSimulator2021
CaringBridge has been around forever it was used in the 90s for very small sites to show case someone with a disorder or need. It would allow you a bit of text as a rudimentary blog, a guestbook, a counter and 5 image uploads. It is VERY different now and is used as a way to link tons of charity begs together.