ID | #1646214215 |
Added | Wed, 02/03/2022 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Fact
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Initial data
A real vampire was caught in Turkey. In Turkey, a real vampire was caught attacking random passers-by, biting and scratching them. According to doctors, the 23-year-old man performed these actions to quench his thirst.
A 23-year-old married Turk, who experienced tragic events in a short period of time, developed mental disorders: the man began to suffer from a split personality and to experience a craving for human blood.
At first, the Turk tried to quench his thirst without resorting to violence - he cut his chest, arms and stomach with a blade, collected the leaking biological fluid into a cup and drank. But over time, the exhausted "donor" began to look for other ways of extraction.
The vampire's father became an assistant in this enterprise, who began to supply his son with plastic containers with red liquid, taken from the hemofund (blood bank).
However, after a while, the parent stopped passing the bags of blood to the sick offspring, which forced the vampire to go outside in search of people willing to share their biological fluid with him.
After wandering through the alleys and not finding volunteers, the man decided to take extreme measures - he began to rush at passers-by, whom he bit and stabbed with a sharp object. Shocked by the appearance of a vampire, people immediately called the police, who caught a mentally ill Turk.
“After examining a 23-year-old patient, my colleagues and I made the following diagnosis: dissociative identity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic depression and alcohol abuse. This man told us that an internal companion forced him to commit violent acts, and also ordered him to commit suicide”" said doctor Diren Sakarya, who works at a military hospital in southwestern Turkey.
In the next six weeks after the vampire's hospitalization, experts noted an improvement in his physical condition. But the dissociative symptoms of the man still remained.
Doctors who do not know what means to treat bloodsuckers have to give an unusual patient a cocktail of sedatives and sleeping pills.
It is noteworthy that the human body is not too adapted for digesting blood. But the Turk did not experience unpleasant sensations and did not complain about the deterioration of general well-being.
Hypotheses
Investigation
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