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  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_006
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040915

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_006
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040915

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_001
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040909

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_001
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040909

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_016
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040916

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_016
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040916

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_008
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040918

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_008
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040918

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_002
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040904

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_002
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040904

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_007
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040917

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_007
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040917

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_004
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040912

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_004
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040912

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_014
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040911

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_014
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040911

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_015
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040913

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_015
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040913

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_013
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040910

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_013
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040910

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_011
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040907

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_011
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040907

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_005
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040914

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_005
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040914

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_010
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040906

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_010
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040906

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_012
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040908

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_012
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040908

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_003
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040905

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_003
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040905

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10164037_009
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040900

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    DUK10163996_009
    SCHICKSALE - hr Mann hat eine fünfprozentige Überlebenschance: Cami und Jake Bartel aus Arizona kämpfen gemeinsam gegen sein MELAS-Syndrom
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Andrea Caknis
    They had only been married five months and were happily making plans together.
    And when Jake started complaining about a headache, Cami Bartel thought nothing of it.
    He went to bed and the couple hoped he’d be better in the morning.
    But at 4am on October 1 2019, Cami woke up to find Jake having a seizure next to her in bed.
    “I called 911 immediately. It was surreal, almost like watching someone else’s life unravel,” says Cami, now 28.
    “One moment we were planning our future, and the next I was rushing my 27-year-old husband to hospital without knowing if he’d survive.”
    What began as a simple headache turned into a full-blown medical emergency overnight. By the time Jake was admitted, doctors were completely baffled.
    “He didn’t just have a seizure,” says Cami.
    “There was also swelling on his brain, and that really scared everyone.”
    Doctors initially suspected a severe viral or bacterial infection and began testing for everything from meningitis to West Nile virus.
    “They told me they were checking for all kinds of infections,” she says.
    “But every single test came back negative. It was like watching them search in the dark while Jake got worse.”
    With no clear answers and Jake’s condition deteriorating rapidly, doctors prepared Cami for the worst.
    “That’s when they gave me the five per cent survival rate,” she says.
    “They assumed it had to be some virus they just couldn’t identify, but they weren’t even considering anything beyond that.
    “I was 22, sitting there, trying to process that my husband, who had been healthy just hours earlier, might not make it through the night.”
    But Jake, now 32, defied the odds. After two weeks in hospital, he was discharged. However the nightmare was far from over. No one could explain what had happened or why.
    “We went home with no diagnosis, just this overwhelming sense of fear mixed with relief,” says Cami.
    During the hospit *** Local Caption *** 48040900

    (c) Dukas - Double Fee !

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    DUK10147123_002
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen / action press *** Local Caption *** 36803075
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    DUK10147123_001
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen / action press *** Local Caption *** 36803073
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    DUK10147123_004
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen / action press *** Local Caption *** 36803074
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    DUK10147123_003
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen
    Virus-Modell und Kreuz, Sterblichkeit bei Corona-Infektionen / action press *** Local Caption *** 36803072
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_019
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    1 Settembre 2021 - Bologna, ItaliaCronacaBologna, controlli “green pass” alla stazione centrale
    nella foto: i controlli dei passeggeri al binario Treni Alta Velocità
    Photo Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    September 1, 2021 - Bologna, ItalyNews
    Bologna, \"green pass\" controls at the central stationin the photo: passenger checks at the high-speed train platform *** Local Caption *** 36439315

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_018
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439305

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_017
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    1 Settembre 2021 - Bologna, ItaliaCronacaBologna, controlli “green pass” alla stazione centrale
    nella foto: i controlli dei passeggeri al binario Treni Alta Velocità
    Photo Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    September 1, 2021 - Bologna, ItalyNews
    Bologna, \"green pass\" controls at the central stationin the photo: passenger checks at the high-speed train platform *** Local Caption *** 36439313

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_016
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    1 Settembre 2021 - Bologna, ItaliaCronacaBologna, controlli “green pass” alla stazione centrale
    nella foto: i controlli dei passeggeri al binario Treni Alta Velocità
    Photo Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    September 1, 2021 - Bologna, ItalyNews
    Bologna, \"green pass\" controls at the central stationin the photo: passenger checks at the high-speed train platform *** Local Caption *** 36439314

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_015
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439303

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_014
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439309

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_013
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439301

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_012
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439297

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_011
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    1 Settembre 2021 - Bologna, ItaliaCronacaBologna, controlli “green pass” alla stazione centrale
    nella foto: i controlli dei passeggeri al binario Treni Alta Velocità
    Photo Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    September 1, 2021 - Bologna, ItalyNews
    Bologna, \"green pass\" controls at the central stationin the photo: passenger checks at the high-speed train platform *** Local Caption *** 36439310

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_010
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439299

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_009
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439302

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_008
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439307

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_007
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    01 Settembre 2021 Roma (Italia)
    Cronaca :
    Da oggi obbligo di esibizione del Green Pass sui treni a lunga percorrenza
    Nella Foto : Stazione Tiburtina
    Photo Cecilia Fabiano/ LaPresse
    September 01, 2021 Rome (Italy)
    News :
    From today, the obligation to show the Green Pass certification on long-distance trains
    In the Pic : Tiburtina station *** Local Caption *** 36439304

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    DUK10145063_006
    NEWS - Coronavirus: Reisende auf Fernstrecken brauchen in Italien ab 1. September den Grünen Pass
    Foto Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    1 Settembre 2021 - Bologna, ItaliaCronacaBologna, controlli “green pass” alla stazione centrale
    nella foto: i controlli dei passeggeri al binario Treni Alta Velocità
    Photo Michele Nucci/LaPresse
    September 1, 2021 - Bologna, ItalyNews
    Bologna, \"green pass\" controls at the central stationin the photo: passenger checks at the high-speed train platform *** Local Caption *** 36439312

    (c) Dukas

     

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