
"This is really about to be a long process," the woman wrote in an Instagram caption.Ī GoFundMe crowdfunding campaign had raised more than $7,000 from more than 300 separate donors at the time of writing. One was her being examined by a healthcare worker, while another showed a bottle labeled "Sterile Water for Irrigation" and some nail polish remover pads. Bernard Parish Hospital in Chalmette, Louisiana. On Sunday, Brown posted pictures from the St.
#Gorilla glue lady goes to hospital update
One post providing an update about the situation published on Sunday had been viewed more than 970,000 times.

On TikTok, her original video upload has been viewed more than 18.9 million times, and each subsequent post has gained at least one million views. As of Monday, the Instagram account was displaying over 571,000 total followers. Online, Brown's follower numbers surged in recent days as "Gorilla Glue Girl" went viral and users of social media sought updates-and shared potential treatments.Īccording to analytics service Social Blade, Brown has gained over 530,000 Instagram followers since February 4, when it logged that she had 35,415 followers on the app. Brown uploaded multiple posts to her Instagram and TikTok accounts on Sunday indicating she had visited a hospital.

TMZ reported Brown had been left unable to wash out the glue and the substance was getting tighter on her head, causing headaches. I have washed my hair 15 times and it don't move," she said in one upload, before sharing a second clip showing a failed attempt at using shampoo. You hear what I'm telling you? It don't move. The woman, Tessica Brown, gained widespread attention after posting a video to TikTok and Instagram on February 4 in which she claimed her hair had been stuck in place for a month after she used Gorilla Glue Spray Adhesive instead of Got2b hairspray. A Louisiana woman who used Gorilla Glue as hair spray has gained hundreds of thousands of Instagram followers after going viral on social media.
