lung/heart disease starting with dander

llcardinale

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It's been over four months since I rehomed my eight four month old pullets due to my developing Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis, or something just like it. The lung inflammation has caused heart damage that has increasingly worsened as my lungs have become increasingly sensitive to everything. When your heart (left atrium in my case) can no longer push blood through the inflamed lungs it backs up in the left atrium and stretches it out because the blood has no where to go. The longer this goes on, the worse it gets and can lead to heart failure. If you can recover by not having exposures to irritants, then a lot of the dilation of the atrium can remodel back closer to its healthy size, but it's unlikely that it will ever be the same, and the older you are, and/or if you have any additional health issues, you are likely to have a shortened lifespan because your heart will not be able to pump blood efficiently. Afib will then likely result in a heart attack. So, five months ago I had no known health conditions and was very active. Now, I'm stuck in bed most of the day. I've been on Prednisone for months and trying to manage subsequent blood sugar issues due to Prednisone, and also liver/gallbladder issues due to eating too much fat in efforts to avoid carbs that spike blood sugar. The other thing that happened due to the stress of the lung disease is that it bottomed out my vitamin B1, an essential vitamin for all neurological function. The ER gave me two 500 mg B1 infusions, but they did so without also giving the needed minerals to buffer the high dose B1, and this additionally damaged my lungs, heart, liver, gallbladder and kidneys. So, be careful out there. Turns out that those infusions did a great deal of damage, and that oral routes of B1 would have been much safer. The infusions may have saved my brain, but they're likely sending me to a much earlier grave, and now I'm struggling with what is a metabolic collapse, and turns out no doctor out there has any knowledge about this except geneticists, and they only treat infants and young children. So, it's me and AI, and AI use has been a real learning process in and of itself, as it takes a very high degree of input of the same data before it starts to cross-reference your data and finally start providing information specific to you, and not just the same poor general info you get from the medical profession. Chickens should be raised with the highest degree of caution. They can kill you.
 
I'm very sorry that happened to you.
What you've had is very, very rare and usually there's a predisposition pre chickens.
I would be very cautious about using artificial intelligence for medical use, it can only use non copywritten information, which most medical information is. So it just skims Facebook and blogs. I would not trust it at all, frankly.
 

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