Marian Adejokun, a 24-year-old beauty queen, has been left scarred for
life after a horrific reaction to eye drops which left her skin peeling
off. She spent more than 3-weeks in intensive care at the Royal London
Hospital where doctors diagnosed her with life-threatening medical
condition called Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
The condition causes the top layer of skin to die and then shed - and is triggered by an allergic reaction to medication.
Symptoms include skin rashes, blisters in the mouth, ears and nose and
swelling of the eyelids. If left untreated the condition can result in
death - or trigger possible complications such as blindness and lung
damage.
Miss Adejokun's ordeal began five years ago when she developed an itchy
eye. Her GP sent her to the chemist to get some eye drops which she
used before going to bed. But the next morning she was horrified to wake
up with lumps all over her body.
As her condition began to deteriorate she was rushed to hospital. As her
skin began to shed she was put into a medically induced coma - and
doctors warned her devastated mother she may not survive.
Speaking about her condition, Miss Adejokun said:
'Unknown to me, I had a rare, deadly allergy to eye drops which caused
by skin to peel off from head to toe. When I was in the intensive care
unit, crying in pain, all I thought of was coming home.
Miss Adejokun's mother, Remi, said the eye medication left her daughter
in such a terrible state she 'looked like Freddy Krueger' from the
horror film Nightmare on Elm Street.
'I hate to say that, but there were so many blisters - her skin was just tearing off and her lips were very swollen,' she said.
'I looked at her and I was so scared she was going to burst open. I saw
death knocking at my daughter's door, all because of eye drops.'
She continued: 'I was crazy, beyond the worried stage and near to losing my mind.
'After a week I thought there was no hope - but then as she lay on the
bed, unable to talk, I said "Marian, you've just made it to university,
that's your dream" and she moved her toe.
'Realising she could hear me I started to sing our favourite songs to
her. Instead of crying all the time I went to the intensive care unit
and danced.'
Miss Adejokun lost so must skin she had to be wrapped in a foil sheet
and still has to be fed through a hole in her throat. She said;
'Everywhere was swollen. My nose was huge and my eyes were so red you could take a spoon and scrape out the blood.'
Even specialist skin experts told Ms Adejokun her daughter was unlikely to survive.
But she defied the odds and pulled through - with doctors hailing her recovery a 'miracle'.
Miss Adejokun has since gone on to complete a degree in early childhood
studies at the University of Roehampton.and hopes her story will inspire
others to be grateful for what they have.
Daily Mail
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