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I mistook my mum for Boris Johnson and feared nurses were trying to kill me after Covid ‘triggered brain swelling’

She told her parents nurses were chasing her around the hospital with knives

WHEN Chantelle Christain didn’t recognise her own parents, started scaling hospital walls and believed nurses were chasing her with knives, doctors thought she was mentally ill. 

In fact, her psychological symptoms were a sign that a deadly virus was attacking her brain. 

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Chantelle (left) in hospital with her mum Carole (right), who she mistook for Boris JohnsonCredit: Chantelle Christain
Chantelle’s personality and behaviour changed drastically over just a couple of days (pictured: before encephalitis)Credit: Chantelle Christain

The healthy and career-driven 24-year-old was working as a strategist at a Fintech company when she began to experience “erratic and irrational thoughts”. 

“I didn't sleep much but somehow had lots of energy," she tells Sun Health.

"My brain and thoughts felt very fast; I started talking quickly and was fascinated by everything."

It was March 2020, and Chantelle had recently moved from her flat in London to her parent's home in Glasgow, just as the UK entered its first Covid lockdown.

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Over a matter of days, Chantelle’s personality and behaviour changed drastically.

“I became very confident and charismatic, which initially meant I was doing really well at work,” she explained. 

But it was her boss who first raised concerns when he noticed Chantelle’s newfound zest for life meant she was sending emails to clients in the middle of the night.

Soon after this, Chantelle started to hallucinate and showed signs of psychosis.

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“I thought my mum was Boris Johnson,” she says. “Her wispy blonde hair made me think I was in the house of the prime minister.”

Chantelle says her mental state continued to get progressively worse until the situation was “completely out of control”. 

She started talking in “gibberish” and laughing uncontrollably at seemingly random things. 

“At one point, I was just texting my friends with strings of letters,” she recalls.

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In a moment of clarity, Chantelle tried spraying perfume in her eyes to "wake up" from her "dream-like" state.

I'd tell them the nurses were coming at me with knives

Chantelle Christain

Concerned, her parents, Simon and Carole, decided to call NHS 111 on April 1 when they realised their daughter was in a “complete frenzy” they couldn’t pull her out of. 

The ambulance staff who arrived at the family home initially thought Chantelle was experiencing a drug overdose and rushed her to A&E. 

While being examined by doctors, the now-28-year-old remembers speaking in several different languages and “climbing the walls” in an attempt to “prove” she was "okay".

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After deciding Chantelle was in a psychotic state, she was referred to a psychiatric hospital in Paisley, where she was monitored for three days.

While on her way to the ward, Chantelle fell even more unwell and was suddenly unable to recognise her parents - or even her own reflection.

"I remember thinking I might be my granny. I then asked the nurses if I was a man or woman," she said.

Chantelle's delusions then sunk into a dark paranoia.

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She was convinced nurses trying to help her had, in fact, kidnapped her and were trying to kill her.

"I'd be on the phone with my parents, and I'd suddenly become very distressed and tell them nurses were coming at me with knives," she explains.

"It was terrifying, and I thought my life was in danger."

If treatment is delayed for days because of a misdiagnosis, then patients may suffer avoidable brain damage and may even die

Professor Tom Solomon,

Chantelle would also get very aggressive with some of the nurses, which she says was "totally out of character".

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Thankfully, a psychiatrist quickly recognised her symptoms as viral encephalitis - inflammation of the brain.

Blood tests, a lumbar puncture - which involves inserting a needle into the spinal cord - and an MRI scan would later confirm his diagnosis.

According to Professor Tom Solomon, a neurologist at the University of Liverpool and director of the Pandemic Institute, having physical symptoms mistaken for a mental illness is not uncommon. 

“Encephalitis can sometimes cause strange behaviour, delusions, and hallucinations, which also occur in psychosis," he said.

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“Doctors can usually distinguish them, but occasionally a patient with encephalitis is misdiagnosed as having psychosis."

In Chantelle’s case, it only took doctors a few days to recognise the condition, which Professor Tom said could have saved her life. 

"If treatment is delayed for days because of a misdiagnosis, then patients may suffer avoidable brain damage and may even die," he added.

"Encephalitis can also sometimes cause memory problems similar to dementia.

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