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Lex Jurgen - July 8, 2016
When supremely rare diseases come afflicting, they're certain to hit up somebody famous. Epiglottitis affects nineteen in a million adults according to medial incidence reports. So never if you're rounding. The little flap at the base of your tongue becomes virally inflamed and can cut off the air passage. Nothing good happens after that. It's typically only ever seen in meth and crack addicts who don't drink enough cold pressed wheatgrass. Sarah Silverman got it. She put her harrowing medical trial into context:
There’s something that happens when three people you’re so close to die within a year and then YOU almost die but don’t.
Is that something that happens experiencing a radically rarely occurring disease among healthy adults? Silverman says she was in the hospital for five days of emergency intervention and recovery. Make your medical records public. There's no good reason to, though the psychiatric invention report would be worth perusing. Anxiety and panic attacks affect forty-thousand in a million adult women, or 20,000 times more common than epiglottitis, though not mutually exclusive.
Silverman noted the wonderful way her boyfriend cared for her during her time in the hospital. At the same time, she's searching the public health database for the four other women in the region to ever have this same illness because that bastard's ejaculation got it from somewhere.
Photo credit: FameFlynet
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