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The Dr. Drew Podcast

Listener Calls

The Dr. Drew Podcast

PodcastOne / Carolla Digital

Comedy, Health & Fitness, Science

4.43K Ratings

🗓️ 24 February 2022

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Drew gives his thoughts on Bob Saget's death before taking listener calls. Visit BetterHelp.com/Drew Visit Ladders.com/podcast Visit BollAndBranch.com/DrDrew Visit Freshly.com/Drew Visit AirMedCareNetwork.com/Drew Check out The Jordan Harbinger Podcast See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone. You might remember me from Teen Mom 2, but my 15 minutes is almost up. So I'm back with another podcast. I'm your barely famous host, Kail Lowry, and I'm catching up with people from my past, putting my exes on the hot seat, and chatting with TikTokers, influencers, and other reality stars. Get weird with me every Friday on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Podcast One, or wherever you get your podcast.

0:31.5

Hey, everybody, welcome to Dr. You podcast. Today we are just taking your calls. Every once

0:35.6

a while, we'd like to just hear from you guys and answer questions. Old school, so we'll be doing that. I thought before we got to the phone zone, I would talk a little bit about my buddy Bob Sagin and what happened in him. We now know that there was an intracranial bleed. I have lots of thoughts about this. One is it was a little odd to me that they didn't report that sooner because you see

0:57.1

intracranial bleeds right away at the time of the so-called gross dissection of the autopsy,

1:02.4

and he had an autopsy very quickly, so I don't know why they did not report that right away.

1:08.6

The other thing is for a middle-aged man to hit his head hard enough to die subsequently

1:16.0

of an intracranial bleed, and again, they didn't really specify whether it was a subdural

1:20.9

or a parankhamal bleed or an epidural bleed.

1:23.6

These are different kinds of bleeds and are associated with different intensities of head injury.

1:28.4

But let's assume it was a epidural bleed.

1:31.8

Well, let's not even make assumptions.

1:33.2

Let's just say it was a bad enough head injury to cause a bleed of sufficient quantity to essentially squash his brain.

1:42.1

That's how bleeds do that.

1:43.7

They just kind of squash the brain, especially in the back of the head.

1:46.4

They can get to the brain stem.

1:48.2

They can cause what called a herniation.

1:50.4

In your brain, you have a very thick shelf that separates the top part of the brain

1:57.1

from the lower part, which is the brain stem and the cerebellum.

2:00.3

And if the pressure gets high on top, the brain literally pushes through that falks, it's called

2:07.4

FALX, and that squashes the – that's it.

2:09.9

You're done right then.

2:10.7

That's it.

...

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