"The number one silence that took away working life."
Hello, my friends, as a nurse who has been caring for patients with cardiac crises (CCU) for a long time, saw a case of a working teenager with a disease, very interesting and more common.
Many people may have heard of Brugada Syndrome or Brugada Syndrome.
The word "dead" in the northeastern dialect (spelled with plump) comes from the word "sleep," which means deep sleep, or sleep.
Old people are believed to be born of a "widow ghost" to take a man's soul to make a husband.
The solution: The men in the village have to hang their red heads in front of the house, or make a sleeping woman to deceive ghosts.
Turning Point: The Thai Labour Tragedy
1990: There was a national news when a northeastern construction worker who worked in Singapore died in a mass puzzle (many bodies a night).
Mortality: Strong, normal bed, but with a rake or a spasmodic breath and death, no toxins or homicidal traces detected.
At that time, doctors around the world were confused. It was called SUDS (Sudden Unexplained Nocturnal Death Syndrome), or "idiopathic death."
Until 1992 (2 years later): Brugada brothers discovered a specific form of electrocardiogram and named it Brugada Syndrome.
Thai doctors have studied and proved that the "death disease" in Thailand is "Brugada Syndrome."
The root cause: not a ghost widow, but an abnormal genetics, causing a short-circuited heart electricity, especially while sleeping or having a high fever.
So why is it so common in the working population?
Although part of it is hidden genetics, the scary thing is...Our "lifestyle" is a great motivator!
This disease is an electrocardiogram malfunction (like a short-circuited house light) that usually occurs when we sleep, and the things that encourage it to relapse more easily in people who are already at risk are:
❌, sleep deprivation, chronic: The body is not charging.
❌ Cumulative Stress: Body Use Exceeds Limits
❌ High fever: body heat affects heart conduction (this is very important. Sick, need to reduce fever!)
How to take care of yourself a priori
1. If the body can't sue, sleep: Do not force an overdose of caffeine.
2. Notice yourself and those next to you: Are you snoring abnormally loud or having asphyxiation in your sleep?
3. Check history: If a family has a history of sudden death or death, should see a cardiologist for EKG screening.
No matter how hard the work is, there's a limit to the body.
# BrugadaSyndrome # Death disease # Workage health # Health alarm # chapter 40 pluswithme






























































































