Australian woman dies from adverse reaction to medication

January 7th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

Gary Beatham had been blamed for her death. He couldn’t understand why.

Beatham’s girlfriend of two years, Louise Armstrong, came down with flu-like symptoms in late December. The morning of New Year’s Eve, Beatham woke in their Penrith, Australia, home to find his partner gravely ill with blisters covering her body. He called the ambulance, but it was too late. Armstrong had died.

According to the News & Star, Beatham was made to wear a paper body suit while detectives waited to hear word from the pathologist on the cause of death. The pathologist determined the cause was natural, and that she had died from a rare but severe adverse reaction to medication called Stevens Johnson Syndrome, or SJS.

, and its most severe form, toxic epidermal necrolysis, or TEN, has a reported incidence of about one case per million people each year. It affects people of all ages, including young children, and is most often caused by common medication such as ibuprofen, and anti-seizure medication, to name a few. Defined as a hypersensitivity disorder, /TEN affects the skin and mucous membranes, causing the skin to blister and peel away in sheets. Blisters also can form in the mouth or eyes, and can lead to severe eye problems or blindness.

Armstrong’s parents, Ted and Angie, were distraught about their daughter’s death and puzzled why police would think their daughter’s boyfriend was to blame. At the time of their daughter’s death, they were dealing with the sudden serious illness of their son, Chris, who as hospitalized at the time with epilepsy.

“It hasn’t yet hit us fully,” Mrs. Armstrong said of her daughter’s death.

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