Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Insulin was in baby boy’s feed, expert concluded

- KIM PILLING wdp@reachplc.com

ABABY’S heart rate soared and his blood sugar level dropped dangerousl­y low after he received fluids contaminat­ed with insulin, the murder trial of Lucy Letby heard.

A medical expert told Manchester Crown Court that poisoning was the only reasonable explanatio­n for the premature-born twin boy’s sudden deteriorat­ion.

The 32-year-old nurse is accused of attempting to murder the infant by adding insulin to his intravenou­s feed on a night shift at the Countess of Chester Hospital’s neo-natal unit in the early hours of August 5, 2015.

Following the infusion of nutrients, that began after midnight, the heart rate of the youngster, referred to as Child F, surged to 200 beats per minute and his blood sugar fell to an “extremely low” reading.

His glucose levels remained low throughout the day shift of August 5, even after the intravenou­s line, and the connected bag containing the nutrients, had to be replaced.

Child F’s blood glucose only rose to safe levels after a decision was made to stop the nutrients from a second stock bag at 6.55pm and extra sugar was given independen­tly, the court was told.

Giving evidence yesterday, Peter Hindmarsh, professor of paediatric endocrinol­ogy at University College London, said it was notable that low blood sugar was “persistent” for those 17 hours.

During that period Child F also received twice the amount of glucose normally given to correct hypoglycae­mia in a baby, he said.

Prof Hindmarsh concluded that a commonly used synthetic human insulin known as Actrapid – a colourless solution – was administer­ed via the infusion. His calculatio­ns, he said, showed the synthetic insulin remained in a “steady state” in Child F’s system up until 6.55pm and disappeare­d more than 30 minutes later.

He also calculated from a subsequent blood sample, which showed an “extremely” high level of insulin, that the rate it was delivered was 17 times greater than a small “appropriat­ely therapeuti­c” dose given to Child F in the days that followed his birth.

Prof Hindmarsh agreed with prosecutor Nick Johnson that the blood glucose measuremen­ts relating to the second stock bag suggested that it too had been contaminat­ed “more or less to the same degree”.

Mr Johnson asked the witness: “Did you conclude the explanatio­n for (Child F’s) clinical presentati­on from just after midnight on August 5, to the early evening of the same day was explicable and only reasonably explicable by the fact that the fluid he was receiving was contaminat­ed by insulin?” Prof Hindmarsh replied: “Yes, I did.” The witness agreed with Ben Myers KC, defending, that the blood sample reading of high insulin came from the second stock bag so could not show what level was in the first bag attached in the early hours of August 5.

But Prof Hindmarsh said that similar blood glucose readings around the same period from a single person would likely mean they had a similar amount of insulin in their system earlier.

Child F went on to make a full recovery and was later discharged.

Letby, originally from Hereford, denies murdering seven babies and the attempted murders of 10 others between June 2015 and June 2016.

The trial continues on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom