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WWE superstar Hulk Hogan, 71, died on Thursday after a reported cardiac arrest.
Although there has been no confirmation of what led to the fatal event, the famed wrestler had allegedly been facing multiple health issues in the months and years before his death.
In an appearance on Jake Paul’s “IMPAULSIVE” podcast in September 2024, Hogan admitted that he’d had 25 surgeries in the last 10 years.
This included 10 back surgeries, procedures on both shoulders, and knee and hip replacements on both sides.
Hogan called out the difference between today’s fighting rings and the dangerous equipment of the 1970s, which he described as a 22-foot ring with “lumps” and “boards sticking up.”
“It was horrible,” he said. “The equipment and jumping up and dropping the damn leg for 40 years, when I had the largest arms in the world — I should’ve been using ‘The Sleeper.’”
“I probably should’ve quit earlier, but I just loved doing it — and the money was just crazy.”
Regardless of the physical consequences of his years in the ring, Hogan stated that he has “no regrets.”
TMZ Sports reported in March 2025 that Hogan had undergone neck surgery to relieve pain, which was a “quick turnaround” that required little recovery time, according to a representative.
Earlier this month, Hogan’s wife, Sky Daily, squashed rumors on social media that her husband was in a coma following recent surgery, noting in an Instagram post that “his heart is strong, and there was never any lack of oxygen or brain damage.”
Daily revealed in her post that Hogan had been recovering from a “major four-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusin (ACDF), which is an intense surgery with a long and layered healing process.”
“If you look it up, you’ll see what the last six weeks have involved … not just for his spine, but also for his vocal cords, and the eating/breathing tubes that are clamped over during surgery,” she wrote in a post. “We’ve been in and out of the hospital to support that recovery.”
Years of ‘physical strain’
In an op-ed for Fox News Digital, Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News senior medical analyst, shared that although Hogan will not be remembered for his health struggles and surgeries, they certainly were present.
Those included “his admitted steroid use in the 1990s, to multiple knee and hip replacement surgeries, to shoulder and multiple back surgeries, and finally a neck fusion operation which, by many accounts, was followed by a downhill slide in his health, culminating in a fatal cardiac arrest,” the doctor wrote.
Siegel pointed out that Hogan came from a group of professional wrestlers who had a “high incidence” of steroid and drug use, suicide and heart disease.
According to a recent University of East Michigan study, wrestlers between 45 and 54 years old were nearly three times more likely to die prematurely than the general U.S. population.
“And those numbers increased the older the wrestler was,” Siegel added. “Many of these men didn’t even make it to their 70s.”
“Keep in mind the physical strain of having a large, bulky frame being repeatedly slammed, combined with frequent travel and the emotional stresses of being both an athlete and an entertainer.”
In 1994, Hogan reportedly admitted under oath — during the trial of then-WWF Chairman Vince McMahon, who’d been charged with steroid distribution — that he had used steroids “for over a decade” before he stopped.
“Hulk Hogan lived in pain for decades, but it didn’t keep him from being a continuing role model for many, including in his later years,” Siegel said. “He came to embody physical and spiritual vitality, and that is what he will really be remembered for.”
What happens during cardiac arrest?
Dr. Bradley Serwer, an interventional cardiologist and chief medical officer at VitalSolution in Maryland, noted in an interview with Fox News Digital that without firsthand knowledge of Hogan’s medical history, the exact cause of the reported sudden cardiac arrest “remains unknown.”
Cardiac arrests that occur outside a hospital have a “significantly low” survival rate of about 10%, according to Serwer.
For those who receive cardiac arrest response, like CPR and defibrillation, survival increases by up to 40%.
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