I am a survivor of SJS. It happened to me back in year 2002 when i was just 12 years old, the medicine and technology was not much advanced. Initially i had sore thorat fever and doctor prescribed me Septran (sulphamethoxazole). Right after 2 days of dosage my eyes started to turn red and skin started to show blood patches. I was taken to hospital at that time many doctors were even unaware of such type of disease. Nobody knew what has happened to me. So they tried changing medicine again and again which worsened my condition. It took me a complete month of hospitalization to get up on my feet. My whole body outer skin was detached i could not see i could not smell or taste .. the blisters were not just on the outside of the body but also they were inside my internal organs as well. Doctors Said to my parents that its a miracle this child has survived but there is a chance he would lose one sense. Alhamdolilah today i am 32 years old father of 3 sons and i am all fine with all my senses. I just wanted to share my story Thank you for reading .
@alaads594410 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing, i'm currently medical student from palestine, one thing i can tell you is that SJS is now well taught in medical schools, almost every one knows about it in the first 3 years of med school.
@minaso8130710 ай бұрын
God bless you! I also had this in 2004 when I was only 13 years old after a reaction to Bactrim for a suspected UTI. Do you take anything today? I was given Sandimmune and told I had to take it for the rest of my life, but my criminally negligent parents never took me to the Rheumatologist as instructed by the ER physician, so today after struggling with Long Covid for the past 4 years (after having pneumonia for 3 times in the months), I have been diagnosed with Lupus and am trying to connect the dots here. 😮
@abihasheikh73599 ай бұрын
I am also survival of SJS
@MsSilver419 ай бұрын
@@minaso81307look up the consumer product information for any drugs you might be taking . Eg This condition is listed as a rare side for Salpraz a PPI proton pump inhibitor , and also SCLE subacute Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus . Amd he did mention some vaccines have it as a side effect so there’s that too.
@DARK-ej2wc7 ай бұрын
Alhamdulla🥲❤️may allah bless you and your family❤️thanks for sharing your story..as said above SJS is now a well taught object and almost all doctors know about it ..I hope nobody faces what you did🥲
@ACtheballerinapagentgirl3 ай бұрын
I’m a survivor of SJS, I had it when I was only 6. It’s the only thing I remember FULLY from that age. I remember sitting at the dinner table at my grandparents house, and eating chicken noodle soup when the blistering in my mouth started. They took me to the doctor around 10 times in the span of a month, and doctors kept giving me different diagnosis, and antibiotics. It was my tenth time going to the doctor, there was a new doctor who had come down from California, she was the doctor who saved my life. She had only seen one other case and knew immediately what it was. I spent 9 months in the hospital and all they could do was wait for my 15 different medications to wear off. 9 months of laying in a hospital bed with blisters, swelling, and pain, LOTS of pain. I barely ate anything, and only drank milk, everything would burn my mouth. I vividly remember my kindergarten teacher bringing me toys every day after school. My doctor hooked me up to the IV and told me that the IV was my robot helper so I wouldn’t be so scared. I spent so long in the hospital, my mom thought I wasn’t going to make it, but God had different plans for me. 1 month after I got out of the hospital, I started going back to school, I feel asleep on my desk for about 4 hours, and my teacher just let me sleep. I ended up spending only a half a day at school every day for the rest of the year, I would get home and just sleep. Now, I have severe eczema and severe asthma because of it. I get extremely anxious around doctors and in doctors offices and hospitals. I have scares on my arms, hands, legs, mouth, neck, and back from blistering and needles. I now understand how lucky I am to be alive today, people need to understand the importance of good healthcare.
@MrsJasmyn453 ай бұрын
I'm a 12 years survivor of SJS, I was diagnosed in October of 2012. My reaction was caused by Bactrim DS, and because of this condition, I can not have anything containing sulfa drugs, nor can I have anything that includes sulfa fillers as well. Due to this condition, it's made me allergic to paprika, advil, ibuprofen, acetaminophen, penicillin, amoxocillin, and Tylenol, as well as any generic antibiotics, because they contain sulfa fillers. As a survivor, I wanted to thank you for covering this topic. I have various friends who have just been diagnosed and haven't heard of this. The SJS community feels as though we're not heard, and you've made sure people will listen.
@GadiBar8 ай бұрын
I had many painful moments in my life including cancer treatment but man, Steven Jhonson syndrome kicks different. Going to the bathroom was worst. Cant even describe the amount of pain from both ends. Currently have symptoms again so i found myself here. I hope it wont progress far enough this time
@MICHALOSTROV7 ай бұрын
Did you have any special trigger for SJS? were you under stress? can stress be the main reason? (I was diagnosed with TEN 3 weeks ago and could not find any other reason except stress)
@manson12ify Жыл бұрын
Prayers up for supa man
@yvesluc8234 Жыл бұрын
That what bring me here
@kofimusicgrenada190 Жыл бұрын
Same bro
@BIGBASH24 Жыл бұрын
Same here he don't look like the same people I hope he powers through
@oluchionyemachi32876 ай бұрын
I had thos as a 5 months old baby way back in 2002 in Nigeria. My mum and dad said I was used as a case study but medical students of ophthalmology and dermatology department then at the university teaching hospital I was a patient in . I almost died and my parents were told by the doctors that there was a 50% chance of survival and if I survived at all I might be left with no sight meaning I would be blind . But then with God, my parents and relatives I pulled through although I'm left with a low vision . Doctors are always baffled by my story of surviving SJS as a 5 month old but then I survived and today I'm 22 years old . Although the scars both physically and emotionally because I was bullied as a child as a result of the features I more or less assumed which includes a pair of greyish blue eyes and a mixed colour skin I am pulling through everyday . I live with my low vision and I have adapted to my environment pretty much easily . If you are out there and you're dealing with SJS or TEN just know it's not the end you'll definitely get out of it. Lots of love 🥰🥰🥰
@katewalchle670411 ай бұрын
I nearly died from Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis in 2007 only a couple months after I turned 30. We believe it was caused by an NSAID, Piroxicam. I was in an ICU burn unit for 5 weeks, and for 3 1/2 of those, I was in a medically-induced coma. There was one week where my chances of survival were only 30%
@youtubesucks188525 күн бұрын
Glad you made it. I supose you took NSAIDs before or was it your first time?
@stephaniemuyakha9944 Жыл бұрын
I had this it is really traumatic, if you think you have the signs go to hospital immediately
@gigolo0067 ай бұрын
Were you treated?
@stephaniemuyakha99447 ай бұрын
@@gigolo006yes I was treated in the hospital but it doesn’t have a cure u can only reduce the symptoms or slow down
@thompsonnoel7 ай бұрын
How did it start? What was the first symptom? I'm taking a medication that has it as a side effect but I don't know if it's just a rash
@katiebarsh5 ай бұрын
@@thompsonnoelwas it this or just a rash? I have something and wondering if it’s a rash or this?
@DeepakSahu-333 ай бұрын
Heyy brother can you give me some advice regarding this
@lovefaith1794 Жыл бұрын
Yes mine too. Im 55 single mom of two who looks forward to each new one. Love to pick your brain about menopause & failed cervical acdf surgery thats created a “pain disorder” because Im in recovery, cant take all those pain meds & am only human as the hardware has failed & now will need a full laminectomy from back. Omg its been 2 years of the worst pain, failed surgery & shots no relief it affects you psychologically. Thank you sincerely for what you do here ❤
@علیغلامی-د1ي2 күн бұрын
Very good description
@Jadebutler11 ай бұрын
I had sjs as a teen from midol. No one could tell me what was wrong as I was asked if I took medication and I didn’t consider midol or Tylenol to be medications… in my super smart 13 year old brain, over the counter meds weren’t really medicine. I thought you needed a prescription for all real medicine. I ended up figuring it out almost a year later as every month I’d still take the midol not knowing I was poisoning myself.
@eman-ne2ng6 ай бұрын
What an incredibly informative video, thank you for this!
@essykinuthia9962Ай бұрын
I'm a survivor. I thank God
@jesusTorres-ij3lv2 ай бұрын
I have been a survivor for a year
@ellastarburst736 Жыл бұрын
I know about somebody who collapsed with this on the ER floor, panic attacked, anaphylactic, and ataxic.
@muhammadchad4149 Жыл бұрын
Where that happened?
@ellastarburst736 Жыл бұрын
@@muhammadchad4149 well, the way he sounds his butterfly risked all six his phalanges, roman candles at both ends of his synapses
@PockettGirl7 ай бұрын
How were his Phalanges D:
@May525253 ай бұрын
I had this in 2022. Still kind of haunts me because I was sent to an burn hospital 2 hours from my town in an ambulance. Was there for 5 days. It was terrible and embarrassing. The worst part of it all was that it was triggered buy a mood stabilizer that was supposed to help a mental health disorder. ☹️😒😄😵💫😬😟😑 The doctors wanted to know if I was depressed!!! 😂 I felt like saying "a medicine that was supposed to help me nearly killed me! And you want to know if I'm depressed?!?!" Thankful to God for my survival. The hospital nurses and doctors saved and helped me.❤
@IDropzGuitar2 ай бұрын
It’s terrible, I got it when I was 8 back in 2011, wasn’t on medication though, wasn’t on anything so to this day we still don’t know what caused it, left me almost fully blind, missing most my fingernails, rubbery skin and poor cardiovascular system
@May525252 ай бұрын
@@IDropzGuitar Oh my goodness!!! One of my first symptoms was what I thought was pink eye. I read about the side effect after I was resting in the hospital and was visited by an eye doctor. I pray you are ok today. So sorry you never found the cause.
@IDropzGuitar2 ай бұрын
@@May52525 wow, see everyone’s experience is just so different, I was all good, I remember I went to the horses here and played with all the kids and that and idk if I caught something off another kid I just so happened to be allergic to, but I was fine and just woke up with blisters all over my skin, and feeling crook, my mum and brother thought I had Chicken pox and basically woke up in a hospital from a coma a few weeks later not knowing what was happening, how are you eyes from it and your skin?
@DisciplineDriveSuccess3 ай бұрын
I had Mycoplasma Induced Rash and Mucositis/MIRM, previously known as atypical SJS back in July. I got mycoplasma pneumonia at the start of July, it took 3 different doctors before they gave me anything, but then they gave me azithromycin and I started to get better. But then I started getting rashes that would come and go and my eyes turned red and the whole inside of my mouth started peeling like in SJS. I was in the hospital but since it was just an immune response there was nothing they could do. Definitely would not recommend.
@karaoras Жыл бұрын
It’s my fav channel
@stephdeferie56624 ай бұрын
had never heard of this until my mom got tens from taking a sulfa drug for UTI. it killed her.
@IDropzGuitar2 ай бұрын
That’s absolutely terrible man, sending all prayers your way and condolences, it’s such a deadly sickness, I almost lost my life to when I was 8 back in 2011 I got very lucky, although I suffer from the effects still to this day! Sorry to hear about your loss
@stephdeferie56622 ай бұрын
@@IDropzGuitar thanks. so glad to hear you survived. enjoy your life!!!!
@IDropzGuitar2 ай бұрын
@@stephdeferie5662 I’d like to do some videos on it just talking about my experience and that, sorta wish I had pics of it lol but sorta glad I don’t as well, but thank you and you too, hope all goes the best!
@Reesiesworld8 ай бұрын
My emergency dr mentioned this sjs, now I’m detoxing and changing my diet affirmatively
@simonep2291 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Very useful, please can you share with us where you get theese greate illustrations?
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Thanks Simone! The pictures are all drawn, using online pictures as references 😊
@simonep2291 Жыл бұрын
@@RhesusMedicine wow, you have great drawing skill, this channel deserves more subs!
@brian_cameron988 ай бұрын
lol..
@kiranrani3851 Жыл бұрын
My mom died due to sjs last Thursday😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
@recondrone1776 Жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss, it's horrible illness! I barely survived it at 10 years old and have had life long compactions and was told I would be lucky to see 35 years old due to the large doses of ACTH (human steroids) for two year to keep it at bay. The massive doses of ACTH shut down my Immune system that was attacking my own body from SJS. I'm 63 now but as clear as yesterday I still remember those dark days and night I suffered for months. I eventually could walk talk and eat after the 4th month but was very weak. A year and a half later I was basically back to normal and became a very good athlete in football and basketball I ran 8 miles a day for years but the emotional and physicals scare's remain! I'm sorry your family had to see it first hand and lose a loved one. Prayers!
@directorclarkmonroe Жыл бұрын
My condolences
@Veesweet Жыл бұрын
My condolences 🙏🏽
@yvesluc8234 Жыл бұрын
Omg sorry to here that
@muhammadchad4149 Жыл бұрын
Condolences
@staceyb38829 ай бұрын
It’s changing my life but I think I’m getting rash
@IRFAN-ph6dk7 ай бұрын
How are you today sir?
@salsertk9 ай бұрын
Its funny medications are made to heal you but at the end ends up killing you
@leagueofotters27747 ай бұрын
And the health care industry is here to heal you but medical mistakes are one of the leading causes of death in the US....and all that at a price nobody can afford.