Hannah doing much better a year after battling SJS
One year ago this month, life was normal for Hannah. Then 15, she had been placed on trileptal to treat her bipolar diagnosis. She overlooked the initial side effects – every morning she would vomit and had lost a lot of weight. But otherwise, she led the active life of the average teenager.
But last March, things went terribly wrong for Hannah. She noticed rashes developing all over her body. Those rashes began to blister and become painful. They also formed in her mouth and were so debilitating she couldn’t even speak. She had to write on a pad just to communicate. The rashes were accompanied by flu-like symptoms, and had become so severe in such a short time, she was taken to the emergency room. The doctors were baffled.
Hannah was admitted to the hospital while doctors monitored her worsening condition, giving her morphine for the pain. An eye doctor was called in to examine her eyes, which by now had begun to blister as well. That’s when Hannah first learned the name of her condition – Stevens Johnson Syndrome, or SJS.
SJS is a rare but life-threatening reaction to common medication in which the skin blisters over and begins peeling off in sheets. The eyes, mouth and other mucus membranes can blister over as well causing serious problems such as dehydration, infection and even death. Trileptal, which is also used to treat seizures, is one of several medications that can cause the serious reaction known as SJS. Other common medications linked to the condition include antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen.
Hannah spent three weeks in the hospital and gradually recovered. She attends high school, rides horses and enjoys the life of any 16-year-old. While she has overcome her battle with SJS, she still has lingering conditions to deal with. SJS has made focusing with her eyes difficult and painful. She recently got glasses to help with the condition. She also has to be careful what medications she takes because some medications may trigger SJS again. But she isn’t letting the problems keep her from doing “you know, normal high school teenager stuff.”
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