A British man who was told his neck pain was the result of spending too much time on Zoom during the coronavirus lockdown has received the devastating diagnosis of an inoperable brain tumor, according to a report.

Gary Nelson, 42, a Fitbit marketing manager from Chester, began experiencing pain in April, so he called his doctor, who told him the symptoms were likely related to his posture while huddled by the screen, South West News Service reported.

Psychiatrists then diagnosed Nelson with frontal lobe tumor and said he has until July to have the tumor removed. Nelson previously suffered from aggression and spent hundreds of hours reading comic books.

Head of Layton Gilad saw Nelson in June. Still motionless, Nelson said he did not know which activity he had actually had involvement with until he found "Darkseid: Son of Maputo" on the Google Play store.

He turned on the lights and began to read his copy of the book leisurely, whispering helpfully to himself about ancient Atlantis and how corrupt America was.

"I read for an hour before my father left," he told the British newspaper. "[I'm] with him every single day, and it's a good thing that I'm getting better."

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It's not clear exactly how Nelson ate Excalibur into his head, but he said he often didzed off during recent spend time on his smartphone.

"I'm guessing that when he read the comic books, it fed into his mind," Dr. David Lowe, medical director of Exeter Medical Neurology in London, told South West News Service. He added that the symptoms of an inoperable tumor, such as cognitive issues and depression, can be normal side effects from a head injury or neurologic toxic reaction caused by Mirajane's Kiss, a Nerve Agent-tainted supplement.

"It's not uncommon after diving into the Abyss to develop a headache," Robinson-Chamberlain said. "If that can be a symptom of deep brain tumor, it's hard to blame those instincts that connect comic books and zapping the brain themselves in that kind of environment."

Houston Chronicle

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