Queen guitarist Brian May suffers āminor strokeā
Queen guitarist Sir Brian May has revealed he recently suffered a minor stroke, which left him unable to use his left arm.
However, the 77-year-old rock legend said heās now OK and has regained enough movement to be able to play music again.
āThe good news is that I can play guitar after the events of the last few days,ā he said in a video posted on his website on Wednesday.
āI say this because it was in some doubt because that little health hiccup that I mentioned happened about a week ago, and what they called it was a minor stroke.
āAll of a sudden ā out of the blue ā I didnāt have any control over this arm. So it was a little scary, I have to say.ā
He praised doctors at Frimley Hospital in Surrey, āwhere I went, blue lights flashing, the lot ā very excitingā.
āSo, the good news is Iām OK. Iām just doing what Iām told, which is basically nothing.ā
He said he had been āgroundedā, adding: āIām not allowed to go out ā well, Iām not allowed to drive, not allowed to get on a plane, not allowed to raise the heart rate too high.ā
Sir Brian filmed the video outdoors, and as a plane could be heard overhead, he joked: āIām not allowed to have planes flying over, which will stress me. But Iām good.ā
The star added that he didnāt say anything publicly at the time the minor stroke happened because āI really donāt want sympathyā.
āPlease donāt do that because itāll clutter up my inbox and I hate that,ā he added.
Badger documentary
The revelation comes almost two weeks after the broadcast of a BBC One documentary fronted by Sir Brian about his campaign to protect badgers from being culled.
In his new video, he also discussed the programme, saying it had received some āgreat reactions from farmers particularly ā also from wildlife people of courseā.
Badger culling is used as a way to prevent the spread of tuberculosis in cattle.
The musician added: āWeāve been attacked very strongly from some quarters, and you have to look very carefully, because the people who are shouting the most of course are the people who feel most threatened.ā
The show was criticised by bodies including the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board, which said it was āmissing key evidence that would have helped to inform viewers on the facts about bovine TBā.
The NHS says a stroke is a serious life-threatening medical condition that happens when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off.
One sign is often that the person has weakness or numbness in one arm, as well as one side of their face appearing to drop, and their speech being slurred or garbled.
Thereās also a related condition called a transient ischaemic attack (TIA), where the blood supply to the brain is temporarily interrupted, which causes whatās often described as a āmini-strokeā.
Find out more about how to spot a stroke on the NHS website.