- Joined
- Feb 20, 2021
One of Kelly's bloated, rotting legs by itself would easily outweigh the Lich Queen. I'm not even being completely facetious.i wonder if kelly without legs weighs more or less than ashley with legs
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One of Kelly's bloated, rotting legs by itself would easily outweigh the Lich Queen. I'm not even being completely facetious.i wonder if kelly without legs weighs more or less than ashley with legs
Yeah.. but Kelly is losing weight faster. Down 30lbs over night! Beat that, Ashley. Fatty.One of Kelly's bloated, rotting legs by itself would easily outweigh the Lich Queen. I'm not even being completely facetious.
Uh Mason, I don't know if I'd be talking much shit based on what's coming.Yeah.. but Kelly is losing weight faster. Down 30lbs over night! Beat that, Ashley. Fatty.
From your mouth to TLC's ear. Whoever grabbed the Slatons should keep on taking notes.She should move in to Ashley Isaacs’ nursing home, vying to be the saddest, spoopiest and yet most invincible of all. The tranny cows all seem to be having crossovers, it must be time for the munchies.
nah she needs to go head to head with sad walrusShe should move in to Ashley Isaacs’ nursing home, vying to be the saddest, spoopiest and yet most invincible of all. The tranny cows all seem to be having crossovers, it must be time for the munchies.
Momokun? Why?sad walrus
Sad walrus is PaigeMomokun? Why?
Cuz, I’ve gravedanced the deaths of lil Hartley sisters(some of my finest work tbh), I’m an incorrigible wee cunt.Uh Mason, I don't know if I'd be talking much shit based on what's coming.
I know not of this Paige, can I get a link?Sad walrus is Paige
Epidural would be a fairly standard pain management method for major surgery such as this. They likely gave her one just before they knocked her out for surgery too - spinal anesthetics are surprisingly versatile and do a fairly good job at blocking pain signals. Additional benefits of a post-operative epidural is that it also prevents movement so she can't lift up her legs to admire them or try to friction burn them beneath the dressings for the six hours or so that it's working. Hard to tell when she might have had this one.Not like they have any other viable non-invasive injection methods. Although, I’d love to see a sternal IO next if she finds a way to fuck up the epidural. Her arms veins are almost certainly worse than a junkie’s. The thread had been going back and forth about the scalp IV, and I think the epidural has shown that the doc is tracking whatever dumb shit she previously did with her IVs. She should be glad she is in such an accommodating western medical system that will still give her fluids and painkillers by any means possible, after everything she has (literally) tried to pull. And they are being smart about it too. A more compliant patient with her sort of IV complications would have just gotten a PICC line already: They know that she’d just sabotage that in some suitably dramatic way.
That hashtag made me groan. Well, r/IF will be devastated to find out that it didn't take a bilateral AKA for her to change her ways. She's loving every conscious minute of this. If she goes down the route of anesthetic awareness like we're guessing it's important to understand that outright consciousness during generals are extremely rare. What's more likely is that the patient has a vague, dream-like recollection of being in surgery, whether this is voices or tool sounds or even a dreamy visual "recollection" that they obviously did not see with their eyes taped shut. What's even more likely is that this happens more than it's recorded because even if you are aware the drugs mess with your brain's memory-forming ability anyways (and to be extra sure they can give a one-off of midazolam if there is patient movement/increasing entropy measurements because midazolam wrecks the memory making process). If she's still septic and her blood pressure was already a bit low plus the normal decrease of bp during surgery then they might have been slightly lighter on the sleepy gases but if she does pick this as her traumatic story then I will laugh because if there's even a modicum of truth to it then she will milk it to its full extent.That hashtag though, I think someone has been typing while enjoying her pain meds! I'm interested to see what she comes up with for her "horrific surgery story". I'm kind of hoping it will be something more interesting than "I woke up during surgery" or some equivalent. Kelly comes up with some pretty whacky lines sometimes, so here's hoping it's more along the lines of "The doctors left me in the room with my own severed legs for three hours" or something.
Either way, brace yourself for the deluge of "The surgeons said I was the bestest, most fascinating amputee they've ever see and the best medical scientists in the world are going to study my severed legs to find out why I had the rarest, most un-bechts like case of bechts EVER!"
For those of you who are new to all this, she riddles her fake med docs with language like that and it's pretttty hilarious.
It's a photo, don't waste your time looking for a noodle nerve video because there isn't one. I've never been truly convinced that it's a nerve. I saw one person claiming to be a surgical nurse or something on reddit say that it maybe looked like a lymph duct and I think it's more likely to be this than a nerve but I'm not 100% sure either way, and that poster had no challenges. The consensus seems to be that it is a nerve but I think it was Kelly who called it a nerve first ergo the rest of us are calling it a nerve. If you zoom in on the photograph you can see a small branch coming off the side and going back into the tissue, it's tiny and hard to miss but this is another aspect making me uncertain of what it could be because if something was pulled out how can it be intact and in place at the top? It didn't seem like a tendon to me either, it seems much more fluid and thin than a tendon would be.Is there a video of her messing with something white and stringy in her leg? I think it might have been a tendon. It wasn't semi-transparent like this nerve is, much closer to a solid paper/bone white color.
So I'm a little confused on what point you're making here, because my reply was in reference to this picture, and having it mixed up with a different video. I even compared what I was remembering to the nerve shown here, saying they weren't the same. Someone told me I was misinformed and the video I was thinking of was from someone else, though.There is a photo of a white translusent thingy that she took out of her leg . It supossed to be a nerve I guess. Even tho is not as graphic as the pictures and videos kelly used to post, this one made me feel sick of my stomach. Just imagining her pulling that thing out of her leg... uggh
Here is the post of the picture:
Made the newspapers in NZ for surviving sepsis 17 times. Claimed septic arthritis and munched her way to having 2 fingers amputated. Was living in a hospice because she had multiple antibiotic resistant flesh eating bacteriaI know not of this Paige, can I get a link?
WHO LOST THEIR EYES??? OMG WTF???I would like to point out that this week we've had one cow lose their eyes (and their life) and this cow losing their legs. If this keeps up we'll have enough body parts for a brand new cow.
Grady Stiles rides again!Made the newspapers in NZ for surviving sepsis 17 times. Claimed septic arthritis and munched her way to having 2 fingers amputated. Was living in a hospice because she had multiple antibiotic resistant flesh eating bacteria
Not to sperg too hard about the bolded, but the pathologist (as in, a physician) doesn't usually see the actual gross (in all ways) specimen, unless they've been requested to do intraoperative consultation, which is unlikely with this type of procedure. Usually, an amputation is a "gross only" procedure, meaning the specimen or specimens are sent to the path lab, where a pathologist's assistant will examine them and record his or her observations. No tissue is processed or made into slides, as the diagnosis is already made and there's no suspicion of cancer or another disease process that could be life threatening even after the affected tissue is removed. The wounds were cultured in the microbiology lab while the legs were still attached. It's possible, depending on the hospital and available lab facilities, that after the legs were amputated and a gross examination done, a few slides were made for routine H & E staining, but not all facilities do H & E on everything, and I'd imagine that in the Canadian health system, processing and staining tissue from this kind of operation isn't worth the cost. I have worked in labs where everything, from tumors to traumatic amputations, got at least one H & E slide, and others in which stuff like this, with a confirmed diagnosis, is considered gross-only. The pathologist would only be called if something truly unexpected was noticed on gross. Even in cases where further analysis is needed for diagnosis, the doctor almost never sees the tissue, only slides.Skip this post if you hate medfagging.
Epidural would be a fairly standard pain management method for major surgery such as this. They likely gave her one just before they knocked her out for surgery too - spinal anesthetics are surprisingly versatile and do a fairly good job at blocking pain signals. Additional benefits of a post-operative epidural is that it also prevents movement so she can't lift up her legs to admire them or try to friction burn them beneath the dressings for the six hours or so that it's working. Hard to tell when she might have had this one.
That hashtag made me groan. Well, r/IF will be devastated to find out that it didn't take a bilateral AKA for her to change her ways. She's loving every conscious minute of this. If she goes down the route of anesthetic awareness like we're guessing it's important to understand that outright consciousness during generals are extremely rare. What's more likely is that the patient has a vague, dream-like recollection of being in surgery, whether this is voices or tool sounds or even a dreamy visual "recollection" that they obviously did not see with their eyes taped shut. What's even more likely is that this happens more than it's recorded because even if you are aware the drugs mess with your brain's memory-forming ability anyways (and to be extra sure they can give a one-off of midazolam if there is patient movement/increasing entropy measurements because midazolam wrecks the memory making process). If she's still septic and her blood pressure was already a bit low plus the normal decrease of bp during surgery then they might have been slightly lighter on the sleepy gases but if she does pick this as her traumatic story then I will laugh because if there's even a modicum of truth to it then she will milk it to its full extent.
I've been thinking all day about the poor pathologist who is gonna have to write a report on not one but two of these specimens. Regards to the surgical and rehab teams by all means but this poor path lab dude likely won't have got a warning about the two legs with necrotic windows landing on his desk. I hope they got cremated quick and she didn't get to see them. I also hope we get to see them on fig1 but I doubt it (despite being a user I never got to find the infamous posts that we determined had to be from her team) but I actually think Kelly might make a good case report published somewhere prestigious in the coming months. Unfortunately I think you'd have to get her consent for that though and I can't imagine they think it would be good for her to know she's getting that sort of attention. I can see it in a vascular/surgical journal or even a psych one but that'll be the limits of her being "studied for behcets".
It's a photo, don't waste your time looking for a noodle nerve video because there isn't one. I've never been truly convinced that it's a nerve. I saw one person claiming to be a surgical nurse or something on reddit say that it maybe looked like a lymph duct and I think it's more likely to be this than a nerve but I'm not 100% sure either way, and that poster had no challenges. The consensus seems to be that it is a nerve but I think it was Kelly who called it a nerve first ergo the rest of us are calling it a nerve. If you zoom in on the photograph you can see a small branch coming off the side and going back into the tissue, it's tiny and hard to miss but this is another aspect making me uncertain of what it could be because if something was pulled out how can it be intact and in place at the top? It didn't seem like a tendon to me either, it seems much more fluid and thin than a tendon would be.
I think that description’s a bit misleading though it’s still a mental story. They’re referring to Amy Carlson / Mother God of Love has Won cult I think. She was found dead this week without eyes and wrapped in fairy lights, though I think the missing eyes were post-mortem rather than while she was living. She’s kinda the opposite of a munchie; she had a ton of legitimate health issues (albeit some alcohol related) that she refused any practical medical help with. 7 people have been arrested in relation to how her body was found so no doubt there’s more horror to come.WHO LOST THEIR EYES??? OMG WTF???