The Herald (South Africa)

Woman suffers epileptic fit after diet injection

- Jessica van den Heever

All she wanted was to lose a few kilograms‚ but the injections that were part of a Bloemfonte­in woman’s diet plan left her with chronic pain and epilepsy.

The woman‚ who cannot be named‚ went to a pharmacy in the Free State city after hearing about the “well talked-about” diet plan it offered‚ which involved injections containing fat burners and Vitamin B.

The first time she received an injection at Preller Plein Apteek‚ everything went smoothly and she lost 3kg in a week‚ the Bloemfonte­in High Court heard.

But when she had her second injection‚ administer­ed by a pharmaceut­ical assistant‚ “she felt an excruciati­ng shooting pain at the back of her left leg into her foot”‚ judge Mpina Mathebula said.

This was because the injection had gone into the sacral nerve.

The woman fainted and had an epileptic fit that was so violent it triggered a prolapsed disc in her lower spine.

Neurosurge­on Hans Relling‚ who treated the woman after the injection in 2006‚ told the court her disc was shattered in the same fashion as a glass of wine that is dropped.

Once the injection was given in the left buttock‚ the woman felt excruciati­ng pain and ringing in her ears because her brain was “bombarded by a very potent sensory stimulus”.

She suffered a grand mal seizure – which typically involved incontinen­ce‚ shaking of limbs and also loss of consciousn­ess.

Mathebula said: “Her history is that she had not suffered any attack in her life prior to the day in question.

“She could have easily lived her whole life without suffering an epileptic fit. This was triggered by the injection into the nerve.”

Mathebula found that the pharmaceut­ical assistant – who told the court she had given at least 800 injections after a day’s training – had acted negligentl­y.

Mathebula said: “Obviously her limited training in administer­ing injections contribute­d to her actions.

“She acted negligentl­y and below the standard required of a person in her position.”

Preller Plein Apteek was ordered to pay any damages the woman could prove and the costs of the trial. –

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