Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 19 minutes ago
I share some new medical analysis on my 4/22/19 CT scan without contrast taken at St. Vincent's East in Birmingham Alabama. The pictures were handed to Birmingham Radiological group doctor Julian Patrick Druhan who signed off on a report stating no injuries were present.

The truth was: I had broken bone somewhere in my head / neck and when I was sent home with no treatment the the injury grew over the following months, increasing in size to several inches in diameter due to infection. I almost died from the complications. Obtaining the records, the broken bone in my skull CT was easy to identify. I tried to take the pictures back to as many responsible parties as I could to get the errors acknowledged / corrected. I was told by almost everyone they would not help me, despite expecting me to pay a several thousand dollar bill for the "service" they provided to me. Beyond this, my psychological state was challenged for uncovering their mistake & calling their professional reputation into question. I was mocked by BRG staff in my BBB complaint, and endured a campaign where new providers I would go to would initially be receptive to treating me as a patient, but upon contacting the original providers on my imagery, would soon lose all interest in offering me healthcare.

In a new review of this scan, fractured bone has been identified between my skull & C1 vertebra.

3 member doctors of this group (Julian Patrick Druhan MD, Angus Baird MD and Donald Shane Kelly MD), radiologists, misdiagnosed medical image scans (X-Rays, CT Scans & MRI I had done between 2018-2019 at Saint Vincent's East Hospital (Ascension) & American Health Imaging). I went into the emergency room and to doctors believing I had broken my neck or skull. The doctors took these scans and typed up in official records I had no injury. I obtained the images and written records later and found in them I had broken the basilar area of my skull & several inches diameter of infection. You can see crack in the bone yourself in the images and over 100 hours of video at yootoob channel mymedicalnightmare.

-I filed complaints against each doctor in 2021 (dismissed and thrown out unfairly by the Alabama Board Of Medical Examiners).
-Attempted to contact the medical practices who refused to put me in touch with the doctors or correct the errors. (Meanwhile I had medical bills worth thousands stacking up from these same visits and the erroneous readings).
-Called BRG CEO Doyle Stewart in a recorded call you can hear in my videos. Told me he could not help me and would not give me the contact information to speak to the offending MD's personally.
-They play major phone games at BRG and use trick voices etc. Becky Burgess who answered the phone in one call was extremely rude and told me I had the wrong number when I wanted to talk to someone about my Angus Baird MD scan for AHI. She claimed BRG didn't work with those doctors anymore, however, as of 2025 the page listing the MD's is still acti
Transcript
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.
Comments

Recommended