Snoop Dogg's daughter Cori Broadus leaves hospital after suffering stroke


Cori Broadus, Snoop Dogg's 24-year-old daughter, is recovering after suffering a stroke last week.

Broadus provided her Instagram followers with a health update on Wednesday, announcing that “my CT scan of my chest is back to normal” in a now-expired Instagram Story. He did not reveal any further information about his hospitalization.

“I'm going home today I can [probably] cry my God,” he wrote on his Instagram story. “Thank you, thank you for the continued prayers, love, etc.”

Broadus, the youngest of the rapper's four children, announced last week that she had suffered a stroke. In a now-expired Instagram story, she told her followers that she “started crying” when doctors explained her condition.

“I'm only 24 years old, what did I do in my past to deserve all this?” he added in another Instagram story.

A week later, it looks like things are looking up for Broadus, who shared a glimpse of his return home. On Wednesday he shared a photo of a living room with a simple sign that read. “Welcome home.”

Early Thursday morning, Snoop Dogg shared his wife Shante Broadus' Instagram post about Cori, “the strongest person I know.” In her post, Shante praised her daughter, “my warrior,” “my princess.” The 52-year-old rapper also took advantage of the premiere of his new movie, “The Underdoggs,” on Tuesday to talk about his daughter's health.

“She's doing a little better,” he told People.

In recent years, Cori, CEO of Choc Factory Co. makeup, has been open about her health, including life with lupus, an autoimmune disease. She was diagnosed when she was 6 years old.

In a September profile with People, Cori Broadus said she had taken a holistic approach to her health, which included getting off her medications and “doing everything natural.” She told the magazine that she felt “blessed and able” to share her health journey with her followers.

Lupus is a chronic disease that has no cure. According to the National Institutes of Health, autoimmune disease is known to increase the risk of stroke; However, Broadus did not share if the two were connected.

“I want to be well,” Broadus told People in September. “You're not always going to be okay, and that's okay because we're human, but I want to be okay in general, mentally and physically. And we’re going to get there.”

Times staff writer Carlo De Loera contributed to this report.

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