A Bitcoin Miner Heatstroked In His Sleep. This Is What Happened To His Organs. - YouTube

Channel: Chubbyemu

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A Bitcoin Miner Heatstroked In His Sleep.
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This Is How His Organs Shutdown
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CW is a is a 23 year old man, presenting to the emergency room, unconscious.
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His mom, Karen, tells the admitting nurse that she found her son, slumped over in his
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bed, unresponsive.
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He had been acting funny over the last the few days.
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You see, CW had just graduated college 2 months ago.
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He got a degree in engineering, but from a minor midwestern state school.
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The year was 2011.
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The US was just coming out of recession.
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The banks had gotten bailed out, again.
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Whatever wealth was left, was concentrating on the coasts.
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And the effects on recent college grads in 2011 in this region were clear: no new engineering
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projects were to open in decrepit fly-over country.
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As the economy tumbled, CW started reading about a new project called Bitcoin.
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At first, he wasn’t sure what it was all about.
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Paper money and fiat currency bad, he was told.
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At the time, he couldn’t take it too seriously.
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But he could run the program on his computer.
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It would do math problems and confirm Bitcoin transactions, and he would get new coins every
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day just from doing this.
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At first he did this for gags and laughs.
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Just the year before in 2010, someone sold 10,000 Bitcoins for 50 dollars, and another
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person paid 10,000 Bitcoins for 2 pizzas, but just year later, 1 coin became worth twenty
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US dollars.
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CW couldn’t get a job after graduating college, but maybe he didn’t need one.
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He already had thousands of bitcoins.
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And if the price kept increasing, all of this would be more money than he’d get as an
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engineer.
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He mined as much Bitcoin as he could.
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He built more computers with the fanciest graphics cards he could get.
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The more computers running Bitcoin, the more coins he could mine.
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The more he could overclock his graphics cards, the more coins he could mine.
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And the more coins he could mine, the more money he’d make.
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He became obsessed.
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As the summer continued, a heat wave started going through city.
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At first, CW procrastinated in installing air conditioning. His parents’ house didn’t have central air, so they had to install window units every year.
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But things seemed ok.
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CW would sit in his room in a tank top, with fans blowing everywhere.
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His rigs were running hot but no problem, he was making good money.
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One day, his room was over a hundred and ten degrees fahrenheit (43.3 C)
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Usually CW would feel exhausted and tired in summertime, so this wasn’t out of the
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ordinary.
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One morning, CW woke up nauseous.
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He got out of bed, and instantly felt dizzy.
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It was hard sleeping the last few days with his Bitcoin rigs running loud and hot all
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throughout the night.
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As the day passed, CW couldn’t eat or drink anything because he’d feel like throwing
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it up.
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And without water, he developed a massive headache and could feel his eyes pushing out
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of his skull.
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He went to bed early, but in the morning, he didn’t wake up.
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Karen thought something was wrong when she hadn’t seen her son all day.
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As she goes into his room, she instantly felt the heat.
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She sees her son slouched over on his bed, unresponsive, as she calls for 911 and he’s
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brought to the emergency room where we are now.
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Given this history of present illness, doctors have a few clues as to what’s happening.
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At examination, CW had tachycardia.
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Tachy meaning fast and cardia referring to heart rate.
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His heart rate was fast, his breathing rate was fast, but his blood pressure was low.
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His skin was hot and dry to the touch, and his temperature measured 106 degrees F (41.1C).
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You want to be under 100 degrees (F), meaning that something terrible is happening in his
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body at the moment, which give doctors the first clue.
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CW’s belly was swollen, and a blood test finds that all of his organs, have started
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shutting down.
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Enzymes from the liver were found floating around in his blood.
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If the liver is supposed to break down chemicals in your body, and it does that breakdown with
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enzymes, then the reason those enzymes are floating around in his blood, is because his
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liver cells have started dying, they’re spilling those enzymes into his body, as his
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liver shuts down.
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Waste products that are usually filtered by the kidneys, one called creatinine, which
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comes from creatine used by muscles, was present in blood at a level 3 times higher than normal.
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Nitrogens were found too.
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If they’re high in the blood, then the kidneys aren’t filtering them.
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Usually, nitrogen and creatinine have a ratio.
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When the ratio is high, that could mean someone’s dehydrated.
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CW didn’t drink much water over the last few days since he started feeling dizzy and
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nauseous, so he was dehydrated.
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But he wasn’t conscious to tell anyone this.
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And this high ratio gives doctors some more clues as to what’s happening.
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If CW is dehydrated and his body temperature is too high, then all of his problems might
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just be because of heatstroke.
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But, how long has this been happening?
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It’s not good that he’s unconscious, because it means not only have his body organs have
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shut down, but that his brain has shut down too.
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Medical staff try to cool him down, because if they don’t, his organs will continue
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to fail.
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They submerge his body in ice packs, as they try to figure out why his body temperature
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is so high.
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CW is only 23 years old.
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Usually, hyperthermia in a young man can come from overexertion.
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Working out too hard during a hot and humid heatwave can impair the body’s ability to
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waste heat through sweat.
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If the air is already saturated with water because of humidity, there won’t be a meaningful
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release of heat from the body through sweat.
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This can raise the core temperature.
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But CW wasn’t exercising; he was found unconscious in his bed.
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How about stimulants?
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Those can increase body temperature.
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His mom Karen wouldn’t know if he had taken anything either.
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But, he didn’t have a history of use and the toxicology screen came back negative for
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everything, meaning CW really did heat stroke in his sleep, because his overclocked graphics
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cards that were mining Bitcoin were generating so much heat in his room, during a heat wave,
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and wouldn’t allow his body to dissipate heat.
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But, wouldn’t his body have told him that things were too hot?
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Would’t he have just woken up and gotten out of bed like most people?
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Not necessarily.
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CW was dehydrated, but he lost that water in the days leading up to his heatstroke.
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Heatwaves don’t just last for one day, they’re several days long.
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He hung around in his room with his overclocked computers mining Bitcoin.
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He lost water while sweating in his tank top playing games.
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He lost water while breathing.
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And because he was dehydrated when he presented to the emergency room, it means he didn’t
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drinking enough water to make up for the loss.
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Do you remember that CW’s skin was dry and hot to the touch?
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Well, it’s hard to sweat if you’re dehydrated, which is probably why he’s dry.
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His heart starts to beat faster and harder to surface blood to his skin to dissipate
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the heat that should have been lost using sweat.
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Less blood goes to the organs, causing something called ischemia.
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Isch from an Ancient Greek word meaning to hold back and emia meaning presence of blood.
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A holding back of blood to the organs as blood pressure starts to drop because blood vessels
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expand to try to get rid of that heat.
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To make up for this and to keep pressure up, the heart tries to beat faster and harder,
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but it’s not enough.
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His core body temperature goes up again.
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Enzymes start to denature because of the heat.
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It’s like these eggs getting cooked as the proteins start to unravel.
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The body needs those enzymes to break down food, to break down nutrients, to function
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normally, but they don’t work anymore.
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His organs aren’t getting blood flow anymore, so they’re getting starved of oxygen.
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The kidneys can’t filter anything anymore.
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The liver starts leaking enzymes.
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The brain tries to compensate for the excess heat and decreased blood flow by opening up
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its blood-brain barrier.
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This leaks proteins in to the brain.
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But that’s not the only thing going in.
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As those proteins flow in, water follows too, swelling in to the brain.
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This explains CW’s headache.
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As the water presses in, it explains why he felt like his eyes were pushing out of his
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skull.
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All of this would be ok, except the brain is enclosed inside a hard space, the skull.
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As the water keeps following the proteins in, the brain swells to a point where it crushes
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up against the skull.
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As the medical team checks up on CW, he’s starting to cool off.
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But he’s not responsive.
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Acids are found floating around in his blood, even after aggressive cooling.
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Even after trying to give him fluids.
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And he’s transferred in to the intensive care unit.
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When he presented to the emergency room, doctors noticed that CW’s abdomen was swollen.
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An abdominal X-ray found that parts of his bowels were dilated.
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This could mean that something’s blocking it.
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It could be a big deal, but maybe not.
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So doctors thought to wait on it.
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Over the next 2 days, CW stabilized.
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His body temperature corrected.
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His kidneys started functioning again.
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And things were looking good.
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Until the third day of admission.
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At morning rounds, doctors found that CW suddenly developed a fever overnight.
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His heart rate was high again, and his blood pressure was low again.
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Physical exam revealed that CW’s abdomen was still swollen.
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Another X-ray showed that something was causing his bowels to be dilated.
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A CT scan showed that the walls of his small and large intestines have thickened, meaning
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that parts of his guts are no longer alive.
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But it’s not the only thing they found.
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Scattered fluid and free air had accumulated outside his intestines, into the space where
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his liver sits.
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Meaning that not only are parts of his bowels not alive anymore, but that a hole was perforated
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into his guts, and the contents were leaking into his abdomen.
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But if he was dehydrated and heat stroked, and his body became like a furnace to shut
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down his organs, how did it pop a hole in his intestines?
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Well, this brings us back to ischemia.
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Without enough blood going to his intestines because he’s dehydrated and because his
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blood pressure is so low, his guts have to adapt.
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Usually, they can survive this, but this increased stress means mitochondria in the cells have
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less oxygen to work with.
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Instead of being the powerhouse of the cell, they start to make reactive oxygen species
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instead.
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Nitric oxide, like what you’d find in some workout supplements designed to dilate your
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blood vessels, is generated in the intestines, dilating the colon.
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The walls of the bowels start to stretch, allowing bacteria to escape, causing endotoxemia.
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Endo meaning from within.
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Tox referring to toxins.
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And Emia meaning presence in blood.
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Toxins, from the gut, inside the body, floating around in the blood.
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Extra insults where the leakage was happening, build up as the gut keeps swelling, until
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a hole pops in the intestines.
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CW was immediately sent in for surgery to see what was happening.
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Surgeons found perforations in his large intestines.
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What was supposed to be moving through those intestines, had leaked into his abdomen.
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An infective coating was found, lining his intestines, along with dead tissue.
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Surgeons had to remove parts of his bowel, and sew together the remaining parts.
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After surgery, in the recovery room.
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CW’s condition starts to stabilize.
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No more liver enzymes are found in his blood.
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His kidney function returns to normal.
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His blood pressure and heart rate are just fine.
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As he seems to make a recovery.
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He regains consciousness.
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But at examination, doctors find mild motor dysfunction, meaning he has some trouble controlling
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movements.
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Several months later, at follow up, doctors find that parts of CW’s brain that control
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movement, have atrophied, meaning they’ve started to shrink, as is common in heat stroke
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cases where the person wasn’t cooled down in time, just like CW.
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Although his brain damage was mild, it is permanent, as he vowed to never mine another
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Bitcoin ever again.
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Personal details of the case from my own experiences in 2009 and clinical details of CW’s heatstroke
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case as one I remember from 2012 Chicago.
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Heatstroke is serious, and sometimes you don’t realize it’s happening because your body
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has adapted to the environment you’ve been in, regardless of your age.
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So stay well hydrated in the summer time.
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Stay in the shade, and keep your body cool.
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Take care of yourself.
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Thanks so much for watching.
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And be well.