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Received yesterday โ€” 12 December 2025

Man shocks doctors with extreme blood pressure, stroke from energy drinks

12 December 2025 at 12:33

Sometimes, downing an energy drink can feel like refueling your battery. But with too much, that jolt can turn into a catastrophic surge that fries the wiring and blows a fuse. That was the unfortunate and alarming case for a man in the UK several years ago, according to a case report this week in BMJ Case Reports.

The man, who was in his 50s and otherwise healthy, showed up at a hospital after the entire left side of his body abruptly went numb and he was left with clumsy, uncoordinated muscle movements (ataxia). His blood pressure was astonishingly high, at 254/150 mm Hg. For context, a normal reading is under 120/80, while anything over 180/120 is considered a hypertensive crisis, which is a medical emergency.

The man had suffered a mild stroke, and his extremely high blood pressure was an obvious factor. But why his blood pressure had reached stratospheric heights was far less obvious to his doctors, according to the retrospective case report written by Martha Coyle and Sunil Munshi of Nottingham University Hospital.

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ยฉ Getty | DANIEL LEAL

Received before yesterday

Consuming lots of energy drinks may raise heart disease and stroke risk, say doctors

9 December 2025 at 18:30

Study cites case of otherwise fit and healthy man in his 50s who had a stroke after eight-drink-a-day habit

Heavy consumption of energy drinks may raise the risk of heart disease and pose a serious risk of stroke, doctors have warned.

Millions of people worldwide regularly drink the products, which are non-alcoholic and typically contain more than 150mg of caffeine per litre, very high glucose-based sugar content and varying quantities of other chemicals.

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ยฉ Photograph: Jack Taylor/Getty Images

ยฉ Photograph: Jack Taylor/Getty Images

ยฉ Photograph: Jack Taylor/Getty Images

How Many People Die in India From Hot Weather? Nobody Really Knows.

16 November 2025 at 13:28
Officials have yet to grasp the magnitude of heat-related deaths, let alone effectively deal with the problem, public health experts and scientists say.

ยฉ Anindito Mukherjee for The New York Times

Commuters drinking water from canisters placed near a bus stand during a heat wave in Rajasthan, India, in June.
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