The 81-year-old Joe Biden suffered from a life-threatening aneurysm that had been misdiagnosed as a pinched nerve in February 1988. After having to take upwards of ten Tylenol a day to provide a modicum of pain relief, doctors discovered the dangerous warping of a blood vessel. If that vessel had burst, it would have likely been fatal.
Biden underwent an emergency surgery to correct the condition and head off its potentially deadly consequences. An aneurysm is a warping in a blood vessel, commonly as a bulge or bubble. Aneurysms can fill with blood and subsequently rupture. When ruptured, aneurysms are fatal in about 50 percent of cases. Even among those who survive, two-thirds will suffer long-term neurological damage.
In the case of Biden, his condition was so severe — stemming from both the misdiagnosis and the Delaware Democrat’s refusal to seek immediate medical attention even as the pain in his neck became unbearable — that a Catholic priest was called in to give him Last Rites. According to the Washington Post:
…Jill Biden, who had been ordered to stay out of the room, burst in, yelling at him to leave. “You’re not giving him the last rites. He’s not going to die,” she said, according to an account by Biden’s sister, Valerie.
Doctors, however, decided to engage in a risky surgery, which ultimately saved Biden’s life.
While in recovery, Biden suffered a pulmonary embolism. This is the sudden blockage of arteries that brings blood to the lungs and can also be a dangerous and potentially fatal condition. The initial February 1988 aneurysm was followed up by a second one being found later that year in May, with Biden once again requiring surgery.
Aneurysms can be genetic and continue to appear in a patient over time. At 81 years old, Biden’s history of aneurysms may raise additional concerns about the closely guarded state of his health. The National Pulse reported in February that Biden refused a cognitive test while receiving his annual physical.