Scottish Daily Mail

Learning to walk, talk and eat all over again after meningitis totally wiped Lucy’s memory

- By Lucy Laing and Liz Hull

AFTER their daughter miraculous­ly won a life or death battle against meningitis, Alison and Steven Scott thought the worst was over.

But nothing could have prepared them for the fight they faced once university student Lucy, 18, was brought out of her coma.

A cruel side effect of the disease had caused her entire life to be wiped from her memory.

She could not remember who she was or recognise her family or friends. A brain scan showed scar tissue on the organ, which had caused the Scot to forget her life and left her as ‘helpless as a newborn baby’.

Miss Scott has spent the past two years learning how to walk, talk, read, write and do everyday tasks she first learned as a child.

Yesterday she told the Mail that at first she was ‘terrified’ when doctors told her what had happened.

‘I had no recollecti­on of what my life had been like before,’ Miss Scott, now 20, said. ‘It was only from videos that I learnt that I was

‘I was as helpless as a newborn baby’

living at home with my mum, dad and sister and that I was at university. I didn’t know how to do anything – like eat, walk or talk.

‘I was as helpless as a newborn baby. I even went out for a burger and attempted to eat the box rather than the burger.’

Miss Scott was in her second year studying education and psychology at Strathclyd­e University and was living at home with her parents in Kirkintill­och, Dunbartons­hire, when she started feeling unwell in October 2014. Her mother, a carer, said: ‘I tried not to worry. But the next day she felt sick and had a headache, so I thought she must have a bug.

‘She had a terrible temperatur­e. She couldn’t speak to me, she was delirious. I pulled back her covers and could see a rash on her toes.’

Mrs Scott, 49, rang for an ambulance but in the few minutes it took to arrive, the rash had already started to spread up her shins. Doctors admitted the teenager to intensive care at Glasgow Royal Infirmary and she was put into an induced coma.

They diagnosed a severe case of meningococ­cal B meningitis and warned her family that, at worst, it could be fatal or, at best, she could lose her limbs. Mrs Scott said: ‘I howled in agony. Lucy was 18 and had her whole life ahead of her.’

After seven critical days, the rash began to fade. Tests showed she was clear of the disease but doctors found scar tissue on her brain.

When they brought Miss Scott out of the coma she recognised the faces of her mother and father, 48, who works for Royal Mail, and older sister Cara, 22, but had no idea who they were.

‘It was devastatin­g,’ Mrs Scott said. ‘It had been agony watching her battle through meningitis, (but) to realise that she didn’t even know who we all were when she finally awoke from her coma was just heartbreak­ing.’

Doctors showed Miss Scott videos of her life and she was admitted to a rehabilita­tion centre. Over the next 12 months she learnt how to walk, talk and do basic tasks.

Mrs Scott said: ‘We decorated her room with photos of things she had done in the 18 years of her life just so we could show her who she had been. Lucy does get very tired, and the memory of her first 18 years has never come back. But she’s defied doctors’ bleakest prediction­s.’

Miss Scott added: ‘It’s very difficult to act like who I was before, as I don’t know who I was. And I’m working hard to regain the skills and knowledge that I had before.’

For more informatio­n about the symptoms of meningitis visit www.meningitis­now.org

 ??  ?? Close family: Lucy, left, as a child, pictured with Cara and Alison Learning curve: Lucy, centre, with her sister Cara and mother Alison
Close family: Lucy, left, as a child, pictured with Cara and Alison Learning curve: Lucy, centre, with her sister Cara and mother Alison
 ??  ?? Lost memory: Young Lucy Scott with her mum
Lost memory: Young Lucy Scott with her mum

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