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So.. how did Bruce Lee really die?

Discussion in 'Movies' started by Albert's Chip Shop, Jun 9, 2013.

  1. Albert's Chip Shop

    Albert's Chip Shop Top Grafter
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    Chinese Mafia?... Heart Attach?... Poison?... His Ancestral Spirits?

    It was all a bit fishy... what do you think?

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2006/feb/25/film.filmnews

    Among mysterious celebrity deaths, it is up there with JFK and Elvis. But the myth of Bruce Lee's demise in Hong Kong in 1973 may finally have been solved.

    "The death of Bruce Lee, coming at such a young age and in the peak of physical fitness, has given rise to much speculation," said James Filkins, at Cook County medical examiner's office in Chicago. "Almost as soon as Lee died rumours began to surface."

    The official cause of Lee's death was recorded in the autopsy report as cerebral oedema, or brain swelling. This was supposedly due to his hypersensitivity to a painkiller called equigesic that he had taken that day. But further research suggests the kung fu idol may have died from an epileptic condition first recognised more than 20 years after his death.

    The theories began on July 20 - the day he died - when he had been planning to meet his producer, Raymond Chow, and the Australian actor George Lazenby, of James Bond fame, to try to persuade Lazenby to appear in his new film, Game of Death. He never made it to dinner.

    The official explanation has never satisfied Lee's fans. "Like James Dean, a death of someone so young gave cult status. He was known as the fittest man alive," said Brian Harrison, head of the Bruce Lee fan club, brucelee.org.uk.

    Some speculated that he had been murdered by Hong Kong triads for refusing to pay protection money or by US gangsters for refusing to work in Hollywood. A minor actress, Betty Ting Pei, was rumoured to be Lee's mistress, something she has always denied. But some suggest he died while making love to her. None of these explanations washes with Dr Filkins. The autopsy report recorded no evidence of physical injury or street drugs in Lee's system apart from marijuana. There were low levels of the painkiller.

    Dr Filkins thinks the official explanation is also wrong. Drug reactions tend to involve an anaphylactic reaction in which the victim's neck swells, he told the annual meeting of the American Academy of Sciences in Seattle. Instead, he thinks Lee died of a condition called sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), which was only recognised in 1995.

    The condition involves a seizure which stops the heart or lungs. It kills around 500 people a year in the UK, is most common in men aged 20-40 and can be brought on by lack of sleep and stress. "Lee was under a great deal of physical and mental distress at the time," said Dr Filkins.

    Jane Hanna, director of the support charity Epilepsy Bereaved, said SUDEP was gaining recognition. "Ten years of campaigning to influence decision makers has seen a seismic shift in thinking and practice on SUDEP in the UK," she said. "[But] we remain urgently concerned that prevention strategies are not being implemented and that young people are dying as a result."

    Sudden killer
    · SUDEP, or sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, accounts for 5% to 30% of deaths in patients with epilepsy. Incidence in the general epileptic population ranges from one in 370 to one in 1,100.

    · The cause of death is thought to be a seizure-induced irregular heartbeat or respiratory arrest. The condition kills about 500 people a year in the UK, and is most common in men aged between 20 and 40.
     
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  2. Jip Jaap Stam

    Jip Jaap Stam General Chat Moderator
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    I don't know, but he would've kicked Mike Tyson's arse.
     
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