Man back from boozy lads’ trip in Munich dies after accidentally overdosing on paracetamol
Dad-of-two Dean McCullagh suffered from liver failure caused by combination of alcohol and pills
A MAN died following liver failure after an accidental overdose of paracetamol following a bout of heavy drinking at a stag party.
Dean McCullagh, 30, had been taking co-codamol tablets containing both paracetamol and codeine for back pain following a road traffic accident in 2013.
The dad-of-two, from Mount Merrion in Belfast, became critically unwell after returning from a stag party in Munich and died a month later on April 24, 2015.
His girlfriend Lisa Fleming told an inquest into his death at Dublin Cororner’s Court that Mr McCullagh travelled to Munich with friends on March 19, 2015.
He missed his flight home but caught a later flight and she collected him from the airport on March 22, 2015.
She said: “I could smell the alcohol off him. He had been drinking all weekend. He was talking about the beer tents they had visited.”
The following day, when she woke, she heard him in the bathroom being sick.
Mr McCullagh remained ill throughout the day, sleeping, eating little and being sick often, the inquest heard.
His condition deteriorated and when his breathing became laboured they drove to the emergency department at Ulster Hospital.
I could smell the alcohol off him. He had been drinking all weekend. He was talking about the beer tents they had visited
Lisa Fleming
Mr McCullagh told medical staff he had taken co-codamol tablets.
Miss Fleming said: “He was probably taking them a bit more than he should have been. He told the doctors he thought he’d taken too many.”
Mr McCullagh had a prescription for co-codamol from his local GP but his girlfriend said he may have bought additional tablets over the counter on occasion.
She was pregnant at the time and has since given birth to a baby boy, who is now ten months old.
Mr McCullagh was deemed too ill to fly and was transferred to St Vincents Hospital in Dublin on March 26 and placed on the "super-urgent" transplant list.
He underwent a liver transplant on March 29 but problems arose and a second transplant was performed on April 4.
His condition continued to deteriorate in the intensive care unit at St Vincent’s hospital. Doctors noted pancreatic necrosis – the death of pancreatic tissue with associated bleeding – and he died two weeks later on April 24, 2015.
The cause of death was system inflammatory response syndrome, a situation where the entire immune system is fighting to cope with illness.