Is Putin’s Ill Health Making Him Crazy? Rumours He’s Dead Are Probably Untrue!
Parkinson’s and cancer are both associated with increased aggression
Update of piece first published in May 2022.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s health issues have been much discussed in the media in recent times. News that some people think he’s dead and has been replaced by a ‘body double’ are probably not true.
But it’s also been reported that he travels with a team of doctors, including a cancer specialist, and he likes to bathe in blood from deer antlers, in case that helps. I’m not sure how!
News outlets have variously reported that he may be struggling with Parkinson’s disease and cancer. Different sources have reported that he’s suffering from abdominal cancer, thyroid cancer and bowel cancer. My suspicion is he has just one of those, otherwise, he’d be absolutely riddled with it. But perhaps he is indeed riddled with it.
With so many health problems, he’s been taking precautionary measures to ensure he doesn’t get covid. During the height of the pandemic in 2020, it was rumoured that anyone visiting him had to isolate for two weeks first. It’s thought that these days, anyone who wants to meet with him is required to take a covid test before they’re allowed near him.
His public appearances are mostly by video link, and when he does go out on visits, he reportedly keeps his distance from other people.
Unlike western countries, where we all know what’s happening if Prime Minister Boris Johnson or President Biden end up in the hospital, many of the details of President Putin’s health are left to speculation.
It’s also thought that Putin may have early-stage Parkinson’s Disease. A video showed him appearing to struggle with abdominal pain recently, and so the rumours continue.
When asked recently, whether he had plans for the election in 2024, the reporter was told they had other things to think about right now.
Compromised cognition
Apart from the obvious question about whether he’s well enough to run a country, let alone a war, there’s also the question as to what extent these health challenges have changed his perspective and affected his ability to think clearly and make rational decisions.
Chemotherapy takes its toll on someone’s mind, and there’s no doubt that Parkinson’s disease can change someone’s thought processes. My dad died of Parkinson’s. I watched his progression from being a tyrant who demanded compliance, to a sweet old man who didn’t have an opinion on anything. My controlling father became nice.
But could it go the other way too? Could it make people more aggressive?
Parkinson’s Disease, Aggression and Psychosis
Indeed, Parkinson’s disease can increase aggression. According to the American Parkinson’s Disease Association, “Anger, aggression, agitation, irritability and personality change,” are all characteristics of advanced Parkinson’s disease, partly because those affected by the disease are frustrated by their symptoms.
My dad’s personality change came years before his diagnosis, and he had no other symptoms at the time so it affects different people in different ways, and mobility problems may not come until later.
The American Parkinson’s Disease Association continues: “Mental health concerns in advanced Parkinson’s Disease encompass cognitive decline/dementia, depression, apathy, anxiety, psychosis (which encompasses hallucinations, delusions, paranoia), and behavior problems (which encompasses anger, aggression, agitation, irritability, personality changes).”
Some people with Parkinson’s are given antipsychotic medications to help them manage symptoms of psychosis.
But is Putin’s disease advanced? Perhaps not, but it still affects the mind.
Some people with Parkinson’s disease experience paranoia, aggression, and distorted thinking, so is it possible that Putin’s assertion that Ukraine was a threat to Russia was simply derived from psychosis? The product of hallucinations and paranoia, induced by ill health?
Could clashes of ideologies between the two countries have been blown out of proportion by a psychotic mind?
I’m assuming he believes his own rhetoric.
Long before these health problems emerged, Russia took control of Crimea, so he’s always been a power-hungry tyrant keen to make his mark in history. But I still wonder whether the recent escalation of tensions that led to the current invasion has been in any way affected by inevitable changes to the brain when someone gets Parkinson’s.
It seems possible to me, that disease may have turned Putin from a frightening tyrant capable of logical thought, into a genocidal killer, now operating with a compromised mind.
That’s frightening, not just for Ukraine, but also remembering that he has a grudge against the West and a massive arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Cancer can affect your mind too
Furthermore, if Putin is as riddled with cancer as some news outlets would have you believe, then he may also have a tumour on the brain, or be suffering from the mind-altering effects of chemotherapy. There have been tenuous links made between mass murder and brain tumours.
Mass murderer Charles Joseph Whitman notoriously killed 16 people and his autopsy revealed he had a brain tumour at the time of the killings. This may have had an impact on his decision to kill all those people, or it may have simply made him crazy.
He was complaining of headaches before the killings and he left a suicide note asking investigators to do an autopsy following his death, to see whether anything biological could explain his actions.
During Whitman’s autopsy, a ‘pecan-sized’ brain tumour was discovered. It caused brain cell injury and death, known as necrosis. Would he have gone out and killed all those people if it wasn’t for the tumour?
The Connally Commission brought together experts to examine the autopsy findings, as well as Whitman’s actions and motives. They reported: “It is the opinion of the task force that the relationship between the brain tumour and Charles J. Whitman’s actions on the last day of his life cannot be established with clarity.”
So they didn’t know whether the brain tumour caused him to kill. But it’s thought there could be a link between the brain tumour and his murderous actions.
Conclusion
Putin’s health has been deteriorating for years, with the first account of him having cancer reported in 2020. Parkinson’s too takes years to develop. My dad had had a personality transplant before he had a diagnosis. The disease is slow to develop and it can change people before it disables them.
Could it be that the changes to Putin’s brain, and his actions against Ukraine, have been influenced by the illnesses that must have been affecting him for some time?
It raises some very real questions about to what extent he is in control of his thoughts and actions, and to what extent it’s driven by brain damage, or cognitive impairment, and the resulting madness.
This is no reflection upon other people with ill health
For anyone who feels this speculation is casting aspersions upon other people with Parkinson’s Disease or brain cancer, it’s not. I’m certainly not saying those diseases make people dangerous, violent, or mad.
I’m simply acknowledging that these diseases can change people — for better or worse. I watched my dad’s personality change dramatically in the years before his death. His personality improved! There’s clear evidence of cerebral changes in people who have diseases that affect the mind.
My dad had strong cognitive capabilities in many ways — he could do crosswords, retained his knowledge, and remembered things. So the brain doesn’t always turn to mush, but perspectives change. And dementia is common in advanced Parkinson’s.
Whether you’re looking at autopsies from a dead person, or scans while the patient is alive, cerebral connections and synapses are lost, broken or damaged in Parkinson’s. Brain cells can be destroyed by cancer. The result is that people change.
How that change may have played out in this instance, is pure speculation. Perhaps in Putin’s case, my speculation is overstepping the mark, because he’s always liked to rule with terror and he’s always had an appetite for power. However reports have also said, “Putin’s psychiatric health is bad indeed, and stories about him going bonkers are not a joke.” (source)
Nonetheless, it’s an interesting question to consider whether someone who’s behaving like Putin is completely in control of his mind, or whether he’s been affected by something else that screws with your head.
© Susie Kearley 2023. All Rights Reserved.
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