Angelu de Leon suffers from Bell’s Palsy for the second time
Featured:
|
ADVERTISEMENT

Welcome, Kapamilya! We use cookies to improve your browsing experience. Continuing to use this site means you agree to our use of cookies. Tell me more!
Angelu de Leon suffers from Bell’s Palsy for the second time
Joan Leary
Published Nov 11, 2016 08:50 AM PHT

Actress Angelu de Leon took to Instagram to inform her followers to always stay healthy so they wouldn’t experience the same thing that happened to her. Recently, she shared her selfie wearing a hospital gown and said she has Bell’s Palsy again and had undergone a MRI.
“Nope I'm not in my pantulog. I just entered a big donut for them to see my thoughts with contrast. I'd smile but my face is not moving. Good night everyone! Take care of yourselves. God bless you,” she wrote in her photo’s caption.
“Nope I'm not in my pantulog. I just entered a big donut for them to see my thoughts with contrast. I'd smile but my face is not moving. Good night everyone! Take care of yourselves. God bless you,” she wrote in her photo’s caption.
She also shared she has difficulty sleeping since her eye lids are ‘not properly closing.’
She also shared she has difficulty sleeping since her eye lids are ‘not properly closing.’
'Something might poke it at ikabulag ko pa. I cannot risk it. May Bell's Palsy na bulag pa. Take care and stay healthy please. Don't be like me,' she added in another post.
'Something might poke it at ikabulag ko pa. I cannot risk it. May Bell's Palsy na bulag pa. Take care and stay healthy please. Don't be like me,' she added in another post.
The actress already suffered from the illness in 2009.
The actress already suffered from the illness in 2009.
According to Webmd.com, Bell's palsy “is a paralysis or weakness of the muscles on one side of your face. Damage to the facial nerve that controls muscles on one side of the face causes that side of your face to droop.”
According to Webmd.com, Bell's palsy “is a paralysis or weakness of the muscles on one side of your face. Damage to the facial nerve that controls muscles on one side of the face causes that side of your face to droop.”
Read More:
Celebrity
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT