The previous few months have been difficult for Tori Spelling’s family due to a run of hospitalizations for various diseases. According to Us Weekly, the “Tori & Dean: Home Sweet Hollywood” actress stated in December of last year that she was taken to the ER after having “a terrible time breathing, [with] high blood pressure and extreme dizziness.” Beau Spelling, her youngest son, contracted another illness just two weeks before Spelling was admitted to the hospital. Beau had previously recovered from a three-week illness earlier in the month. Spelling revealed that her other sons, Liam and Finn, were also sick a day after she broke the news about Beau.
Unfortunately, the family’s health problems continued even after 2022 came to an end. According to Page Six, on January 11, Spelling disclosed in an Instagram Story that her daughter Stella, 14, had been admitted to the hospital. At the time, she captioned the image, “The hits just keep coming.” A few days later, Spelling reported via E! News in another Instagram Story that Stella had been given a hemiplegic migraine diagnosis. In her Story, Spelling stated that the symptoms of a hemiplegic migraine episode are comparable to those of a stroke and often involve a sudden, intense headache on one side of the brain, weakness, and numbness on one half of the body.
The author of “Mommywood” has since provided additional information on the terrifying specifics of Stella’s health.
On January 19, Tori Spelling made an appearance on Sirius XM’s “Jeff Lewis Live,” where she spoke about her daughter Stella’s recent health after two hospital stays.
Stella Spelling, 14, is recovering from a hemiplegic migraine, and Spelling described her condition as “not great” while describing the “very terrible” symptoms she saw in her daughter.
The former reality star described the symptoms as being nearly stroke-like, saying that “basically one side becomes numb.” “She could not lift her left arm since it was entirely numb. then her mouth, then the front half of her throat, “spelling from memory
Despite the fact that Spelling herself experiences headaches, the actor claims that Stella inherited the condition from her husband Dean McDermott’s family.
Even though Stella’s migraine has passed, she is currently feeling queasy and disoriented. Spelling wants Stella to see a “neurologist at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles” soon since she doesn’t want to take any chances.
Hemiplegic migraines account for under 0.01% of all migraine cases, according to the American Migraine Foundation. Women are three times more likely than men to have the illness, which most commonly affects people between the ages of 12 and 17 years old.