Current:Home > NewsBrian Austin Green was bedridden for months with stroke-like symptoms: 'I couldn't speak' -MacroWatch
Brian Austin Green was bedridden for months with stroke-like symptoms: 'I couldn't speak'
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Date:2025-04-12 05:24:21
Brian Austin Green is opening up about his debilitating past health struggles.
Speaking to Cheryl Burke in Monday's new episode of her podcast, "Sex, Lies and Spray Tans," the "Beverly Hills, 90210" actor detailed mysterious health issues that caused severe brain fog and temporarily robbed him of basic language skills.
"I'd spent four and a half years recovering from stroke-like symptoms without ever having had a stroke," Green told Burke.
Doctors diagnosed him with a combination of vertigo and ulcerative colitis, he said, and he was bedridden for three months.
"Then these neurological things started happening after the vertigo," Green said. "I got to the point where I shuffled like I was a 90-year-old man. I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t read. I couldn’t write."
He sought out a new specialist, who confirmed his issues were dietary. Stress, combined with "internal inflammation from gluten and dairy," compounded his symptoms.
"It was all undiagnosed by Western medicine, so I ended up having to finally find a doctor that is much more into, like, kinesiology and Eastern medicine," said Green, who has competed on recent seasons of "The Masked Singer" and "Dancing with the Stars."
Green, 50, and his fiancé, ballroom dancer Sharna Burgess, previously spoke about his battle with ulcerative colitis in an interview with "Good Morning America" last year. Green revealed he lost 20 pounds because of the inflammatory bowel disease, which causes irritation and open sores in the digestive tract, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
"I try and avoid gluten and dairy as much as possible," Green said. "It's really just dietary, like, as long as I can keep things within my system that my body doesn't think I'm poisoning it with, then it doesn't fight back.
"I would eat food, and literally it was like, my body didn't process any of that," he continued. "So then, when you start playing catch up with, like, staying on top of being hydrated enough, that's such a battle."
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