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Abstract:The "Game of Thrones" star Emilia Clarke (Daenerys Targaryen) said in The New Yorker that she survived two brain aneurysms while filming the HBO show.
{1} “权力的游戏”明星艾米莉亚·克拉克在“纽约客”中撰写了一篇个人文章,揭示了她对两个脑动脉瘤的体验。克拉克在2011年和2013年再次写道,在HBO Show的拍摄季节之间,她在医院重症监护室接受了脑部手术和强烈康复。现在她说她已经成立了一个慈善机构,“帮助增加脑损伤和中风后的康复通道”阅读更多关于慈善事业,同样的你,这里。“权力的游戏”明星艾米莉亚克拉克在纽约人发表了一篇题为“为我的生命而战”的个人文章,揭示了她生存的两个脑动脉瘤。作为克拉克在2011年拍摄“权力的游戏”的第一季后,她与私人教练一起训练时发现了这些动脉瘤中的第一个。她因呕吐而在健身房浴室瘫倒,因为她说她被诊断为“a蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)是一种危及生命的中风,由大脑周围空间的出血引起。”Clarke说,医院工作人员告诉她,大约三分之一的SAH患者立即或很快就死了。“Clarke's r从第一次(”微创“)脑外科手术中恢复很难。她说,由于一种叫失语症的状况,她被关押在重症监护室一个星期 - 克拉克无法说出自己的名字,也没有说”胡说八道“的话。失语症过去了,整整一个月后医院克拉克已经出院并重返工作岗位,拍摄了”权力的游戏“的第二季。但是医生们已经警告她在她的大脑的另一个地方发现了第二个较小的动脉瘤。”在那个集合上,我没有错过了节拍,但我挣扎着,“克拉克写道。 ”第二季将是我最糟糕的。我不知道丹妮莉丝在做什么。如果我真的很诚实,我每天的每一分钟都认为我会死。“到2013年,在”游戏的第三季“之后权力”完成后,克拉克进行了她当时常规的脑部扫描,并被告知动脉瘤需要进行手术。这个我的手术并不顺利。第一个手术失败,医生需要打开她的头骨。第二个动脉瘤是固定的,但克拉克在医院度过了一个月,并描述了一种痛苦的恢复,包括深深的绝望和焦虑以及惊恐发作.Clarke将她的手术保留在报刊上,尽管“权力的游戏”显示者知道,她不想让它影响她的工作和四季的宣传旅游。她说她在第二次手术后的几个星期就参加过圣地亚哥动漫展。“但是现在,这些年来保持安静,我完整地告诉你真相,”克拉克写道。 “请相信我:我知道我不是独一无二,几乎不孤单。无数人遭受的苦难更加严重,没有像我很幸运能得到的照顾。”随着她的纽约客文章的发表,克拉克宣布她创立了一个名为Same You的新慈善机构。“我已经工作了几年的慈善机构今天上线!”克拉克在Instagram上写道。 “@sameyouorg充满了充满爱,脑力和惊人故事的惊人人物的帮助。@ newyorkermag发表了我的故事,现在我想听听你的故事!”Instagram嵌入://instagram.com/p/BvRr- IKlQCm /嵌入宽度:800px根据其网站,Same You旨在推动“英国卒中协会的初步研究,以了解脑损伤和中风患者的康复需求”,尤其是年轻人。当她第一次中风住院时,克拉克已经24岁了。同一个你的其他目标包括资助临床研究和形成新的神经康复训练资格。 “我呼吁优先增加神经康复的资金,”Clarke在同一网站上的博客说。 “离开医院后的每个人都应该有他们迫切需要的多学科康复和康复护理。”在这里阅读艾米莉亚克拉克在“纽约客”中的全文,了解更多关于同一个你以及如何在这里捐款。 {1 }{0}{1}
The “Game of Thrones” star Emilia Clarke wrote a personal essay in The New Yorker revealing her experience with two brain aneurysms. Clarke wrote that in 2011 and again in 2013, between filming seasons of the HBO Show, she underwent brain surgery and intense recoveries in hospital intensive-care units.Now she says she's founded a charity to “help increase rehabilitation access after brain injury and stroke.”Read more about the charity, Same You, here.The “Game of Thrones” star Emilia Clarke has published a personal essay in The New Yorker titled “A Battle for My Life,” revealing her survival of two brain aneurysms.As Clarke said, the first of these aneurysms was discovered when she was working out with a personal trainer following the first season of filming “Game of Thrones” in 2011. She collapsed in the gym bathroom after vomiting because of what she said was diagnosed as “a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), a life-threatening type of stroke, caused by bleeding into the space surrounding the brain.”Clarke said the hospital staff told her about one-third of SAH patients died “immediately or soon thereafter.”Clarke's recovery from the first (“minimally invasive”) brain surgery was hard. She said she was held in the intensive-care unit for a week because of a condition called aphasia — Clarke was unable to say her own name or speak in anything other than “nonsense” words.The aphasia passed, and after a full month in the hospital Clarke was discharged and returned to work to film the second season of “Game of Thrones.”But the doctors had warned her of a second, smaller aneurysm on a different spot of her brain.“On the set, I didn't miss a beat, but I struggled,” Clarke wrote. “Season two would be my worst. I didn't know what Daenerys was doing. If I am truly being honest, every minute of every day I thought I was going to die.”By 2013, after the third season of “Game of Thrones” was completed, Clarke went in for her then-routine brain scan and was told the aneurysm needed to be operated on. This time surgery didn't go as smoothly. The first procedure failed, and the doctors needed to open her skull. The second aneurysm was fixed, but Clarke spent another month in the hospital and described a painful recovery involving a deep sense of hopelessness and anxiety and panic attacks.Clarke kept her surgeries from the press, and though the “Game of Thrones” showrunners knew, she did not want it to affect her work and the publicity tours around the seasons. She said she attended San Diego Comic-Con “a few weeks after that second surgery.”“But now, after keeping quiet all these years, I'm telling you the truth in full,” Clarke wrote. “Please believe me: I know that I am hardly unique, hardly alone. Countless people have suffered far worse, and with nothing like the care I was so lucky to receive.”In tandem with the publication of her New Yorker essay, Clarke announced a new charity she'd founded called Same You.“The charity I have been working on for a fair few years goes live today!” Clarke wrote on Instagram. “@sameyouorg full to bursting with love, brain power and the help of amazing people with amazing stories. @newyorkermag published my story, now I'd like to hear yours!”Instagram Embed: //instagram.com/p/BvRr-IKlQCm/embed Width: 800pxAccording to its website, Same You will aim to boost “primary research with the Stroke Association UK to understand the recovery needs” of people who experience brain injuries and strokes, particularly young people. Clarke was 24 when her first stroke hospitalized her.Other aims of Same You include funding clinical research and forming a new neurorehabilitation training qualification. “I am calling for the prioritization of increased funding for neurorehabilitation,” Clarke's blog on the Same You site said. “Everyone after leaving hospital should have the multi-disciplinary rehabilitation and recovery care they desperately need.”Read Emilia Clarke's full essay in The New Yorker here, and learn more about Same You and how you can donate here.
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