Memorial Healthcare System - South Broward Hospital District

10/06/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/07/2025 08:59

Radio Personality That Survived a Massive Brain Aneurysm Now Using Her Voice to Help Others

"Jada Kiss" may have sounded like the life-of-the-party on 103.5 (FM) the Beat's nighttime radio show, but the real-life Jada Williams was scared. A single mother with two kids, she had crippling headaches every day for three months and was losing the ability to do the job she had done for the past four years.

"My brain was hurting, I was nauseous, and I could barely see out of one eye," said Williams, the producer of DJ Bulletproof's show/podcast. "I couldn't keep up with the pace of live radio and was barely making it through my shifts."

Given her history of migraine headaches, it would have been reasonable to assume Williams' issues stemmed from that, but the 42-year-old, North Miami resident knew this was a different kind of pain. At her wits' end, she went to the ER at Memorial Hospital Pembroke, where a CT scan revealed a giant brain aneurysm, the type that, when it ruptures, kills nearly 50% of its victims. Among the half that manage to survive the brain bleed, nearly 70% are left with cognitive deficits that affect memory, attention, reasoning, problem-solving, and decision-making.

"Jada had one of the largest aneurysms I've ever seen," said Brijesh P. Mehta, MD, chief of Adult & Pediatric Neurointerventional Surgery and medical director of the Comprehensive Stroke Program at Memorial Healthcare System. "We performed a minimally invasive endovascular procedure in the cath lab to cut off the blood supply to the aneurysm using a flow-diverting device and coils."

Memorial Neuroscience Institute neurointerventionalists care for more than 200 brain aneurysm patients each year, making it one of the largest treatment centers in South Florida. One in every 50 people has the potentially deadly condition, with high blood pressure, smoking, and family history being the most significant contributors to brain aneurysm formation. Worsening headaches, nausea, vomiting, and neck stiffness are the most common symptoms.

While both her grandfather and his sister died from brain aneurysms, Williams is now about four months post-procedure and on the road to a full recovery. She is once again driving, taking care of her children, ages 11 and 14, and contributing to the radio show. But she's also being cautious to avoid setbacks, with the memories of 10 days of bed rest and six weeks without leaving her home too fresh to forget.

What was once, according to Dr. Mehta, "a ticking time bomb," is now a new lease on life for Jada Williams. A brain aneurysm that could have easily ruptured never did and Williams believes that means she was meant to serve a bigger purpose.

"I hope I can be an example to others," she said. "Your lifestyle matters, and you don't have to be a superwoman. Listen to your body, advocate for yourself, and if you think something isn't right, get it checked before another day goes by."

Memorial Healthcare System - South Broward Hospital District published this content on October 06, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on October 07, 2025 at 15:02 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]