A few days ago, on Wednesday April 6, a wave of panic hit Nabilla and her husband Thomas Vergara in Dubai. The lovers found their son Milann in a critical situation overnight. The 2 year old boy no longer breathing after being infected with bacteria. “II couldn’t even call me during the night“, confided the pretty 30-year-old brunette, currently pregnant with her second child. Neither one nor two, the couple took him to the emergency room where he was placed under breathing apparatus.
A few hours later, everything was back to normal, but vigilance is still required! And for good reason, Milann still has some difficulty breathing on his own. On the night of Thursday to Friday, he also needed help, thanks to a machine that his parents got for their home, precisely in the event of a crisis. On Snapchat, very early this April 8, 2022, Nabilla filmed her son using it (see our slideshow). “Tonight, he woke up every hour or so. He even fell out of bed once, so we decided to bring him back to our bed. Luckily we had put duvets on so he wouldn’t hurt himself. Now he’s on a respirator because he’s been coughing all night. It’s a cough that prevents him from breathing, it’s super complicated for him. It wakes him up every time“, she confided.
The social media superstar nevertheless reassured his community by assuring that Milann was “in a good mood“, revealing images of him laughing and enjoying a happy cartoon.
However, breathing problems seem to have become recurrent with Milann. In June 2021, the toddler had scared his parents for the first time. At the time, Nabilla appeared in tears from the hospital, helpless in the face of her son’s condition. “They put him on a respirator so he could breathe. He has a respiratory tract infection. We found him in the bedroom, he couldn’t breathe. He was choking. They took him to the hospital and they gave him a cortisone shot in the leg. (…) He has what is called Croup, an acute viral infection of the upper respiratory tract“, she explained. This infection is relatively common in children between 6 months and 6 years old. It is however almost never observed in adolescents or adults.