00:00For all the details on what happened to me regarding my injury, we're pushing 100 hours plus of video now.
00:07YouTube channel My Medical Nightmare.
00:09Alright, in a new video series, we're going to take my old medical imagery, that's CTs, MRIs, and X-rays,
00:18and we're going to put them in front of some new doctors and medical experts,
00:24and we're going to get some third-party opinions on what appears therein.
00:31The material you see on my channel is really only half of my story.
00:36I've had to be real careful on what I've disclosed and discussed on the treatment side,
00:44because as you can see in my videos, when I found out I was misdiagnosed
00:49and took them back to the doctors and the hospitals,
00:53they, of course, denied any injury appeared in those pictures.
00:59And what's more, they refused to re-examine the data and would not help me in any way to correct
01:06those errors.
01:08When I sought out other doctors and providers, they took these images and contacted the original doctors.
01:17They proceeded to badmouth me.
01:20They ruined several relationships that I had with new healthcare providers.
01:25UAB, for example, who, after a certain point, would only place me on waiting lists.
01:33I was given an eight-month waiting estimate to see just a general family physician.
01:40All right, so today, an image which shows an area between the underside of my skull and the C1 atlas
01:52vertebrae.
01:53I had this CT done without contrast on 4-22-2019 at St. Vincent's East Hospital, Birmingham, Alabama,
02:04formerly Ascension, now UAB.
02:06This image series was looked at by Birmingham Radiological Group.
02:13Dr. Julian Patrick Druhan returned a reading claiming,
02:19I had no injuries present in this scan.
02:22And this was absolutely not true.
02:24The serious head trauma-based injury that I had, I almost died from soon after this.
02:32So, I'll show here the old report where the doctor claims I had no injuries.
02:39This picture and this scan may be the single most important piece of medical imagery that I received.
02:49This is the kind of injury that does not heal easily and usually requires emergency surgery.
02:57I was sent home, I did not receive any treatment.
03:01This area in my neck, it did not heal and infection began to grow.
03:06This grew to several inches in diameter.
03:10The source of the infection that was noted by medical providers later on,
03:17this had to originate from some larger causative factor.
03:22I had a chance to put this imagery in front of some new experts.
03:28It looks like the true extent of my injuries at the time may have been more complicated.
03:35All right, so the area we're looking at, an axial view of the craniovertebral junction,
03:41specifically focusing on the base of the skull and the first cervical vertebrae, C1, the atlas.
03:47Primary findings.
03:49Within the highlighted red region, patient's left side image right,
03:53there's a significant disruption in the cortical continuity of the C1 lateral mass and posterior arch.
04:02This appearance may suggest a common unit fracture where the bone breaks into several fragments.
04:10The bone in this area appears irregular and displaced when compared to the contralateral side that's the patient's right.
04:19These findings could reflect an acute traumatic injury to the atlas,
04:25such as a Jefferson-type burst fracture or a complex lateral mass fracture.
04:31In a continuing examination details comparison,
04:34When comparing the highlighted region to the opposite side of the image,
04:40the normal ring-like structure of the C1 vertebrae is lost.
04:44The contralateral patient's right side shows a more continuous and expected cortical outline.
04:52Anatomical deviation.
04:54The fragments in the red box appear to be shifted,
04:57which could indicate instability at the craniovertebral junction.
05:02The findings are highly consistent with an acute fracture of the C1 vertebrae atlas on the patient's left side.
05:11Because injuries to the upper cervical spine carry a high risk of instability and potential neurological complications,
05:21this requires immediate evaluation by a neurosurgeon or orthopedic spine specialist
05:29and usually necessitates stabilization, such as a cervical collar, until fully cleared.
05:37Alabama-based Birmingham Radiological Group.
05:40They claim to have 45 radiologists on the payroll
05:44and are composed of doctors that examine MRI, X-rays, and CT imagery.
05:50Many doctors and medical practices in the Birmingham area rely on their services.
05:55And you may be surprised if you went to see a doctor and had an MRI, CT, or X-ray
06:01in the Birmingham area.
06:02A BRG, Birmingham Radiological Group doctor, may have examined your images.
06:08And you may not be aware of it until later.
06:11I was a customer and patient of Birmingham Radiological Group in 2018 and 2019.
06:17I had three of their doctors look at MRI, CT, and X-ray of a major injury that I had
06:24in my head.
06:25I almost died from this.
06:27These doctors wrote in their reports that I had no injury present.
06:31I knew otherwise.
06:32Went and got the pictures.
06:33I'll put the pictures up here yet again.
06:36And what is clearly visible at this time, when I was being told these falsehoods,
06:42was that around six inches in diameter of infection appears inside my head.
06:48I'd actually broken my skull in the basilar area in the region of the occipital condyle and condular canal.
06:55My issues are unresolved outstanding as it relates to Birmingham Radiological Group doctors,
07:01Angus Baird, MD, Julian Patrick Druhan, MD, and Donald Shane Kelly, MD.
07:08I called the CEO, Doyle Stewart, and he told me in a recorded phone call
07:12that he was not going to help me get my own images looked at again
07:17or to correct the errors of their doctors.
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