Posted on 06/23/2022 10:48:15 AM PDT by xp38
Edited on 06/23/2022 1:32:40 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
The surgery, in April, was routine: Gleycy Correia was having her tonsils removed.
Article content But five days later, the former Miss Brazil suffered a hemorrhage and fell into a coma for more than two months.
Now Brazil is mourning her loss. Correia, who was crowned Miss Costa do Sol and Miss United Continents Brazil in 2018, died Monday at 27 of kidney failure. She never recovered consciousness.
(Excerpt) Read more at torontosun.com ...
Bad writing she didnt die from the tonsillectomy ...
I looked her up. Looks a ton like Sophia Vargas from Modern Family. As soon as I saw the picture i heard in my head “JAAAAAAYYYYY!!”
Tonsils huh? I’m starting to get suspicious.
That’s sad.
It was obviously complications from Covid or the vax, depending on your chosen paranoia.
/s
When I read about Tonsils, the Cosby routine is the first thing that comes to mind…..”Hey you, almost a doctor!”
Yeah cause no one EVER died from a surgical complication before.
Apparently there is an artery not far from the tonsils and extreme bleeding can occur in a small % of cases. Sad that nobody caught it.
That happened to the young son of a former coworker of mine about 20 years ago. I don’t think the boy was older than 5 and he bled out.
Kidney failure?
How did the doctors accomplish that in a tonsillectomy?
Hemorrhage following tonsillectomy is a well known risk, and is easily a medical emergency. In this case, the post-op hemorrhage was recognized ~5 days following the procedure. The young woman fell into a coma, never regained consciousness, and died two months later of kidney failure. Simple enough to tie her death back to the surgical procedure.
The term “minor surgery” is an oxymoron.
So Beautiful,
So sad.
RIP
Well, it says she had a hemorrhrage five days after the surgery, so it is quite possible that the hemorrhage was a complication of the surgery.
Well, I imagine if you lose enough blood it might cause your organs to not function properly...
That could have been me when I was a child way back in the 80s. Luckily, they ran the proper tests, found an iron deficiency, and canceled the procedure just in the nick of time. I was in the waiting room ready to go back.
Sad. RIP.
Jeez. Terrible. I had a dear friend in São Paulo go through what was supposed to be a routine surgery. Post-surgery day she was posting “It’s awful to get sick after surgery” and the next day she was gone. That hit me. She was such a sweet girl.
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