A HEARTBROKEN couple who lost their son to a deadly brain condition only got a diagnosis months after his death.
Louise and Richard Taylor’s “wonderful” son Henry died of encephalitis – inflammation of the brain – on November 22 2019, just weeks before his ninth birthday.
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeRichard and Louise Taylor with Henry[/caption]
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeThe ‘beautiful, wonderful little boy’ passed away just days before his ninth birthday on November 22 2019[/caption]
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeHenry wasn’t officially diagnosed with encephalitis until months after he passed away[/caption]
But doctors were baffled about the cause of his symptoms, which included confusion, anxiety and short-term memory loss, and failed to diagnose Henry with encephalitis before his death.
It was only when the eight-year-old “couldn’t speak” that Louise, 46, a civil servant, and Richard, 47, a secondary school teacher, from north London, realised “something was deeply, deeply wrong”.
They took him to North Middlesex University Hospital on November 18 2019, before being transferred to St Mary’s Hospital, but doctors struggled to determine what was wrong with Henry.
“They kept on saying it doesn’t make medical sense, it doesn’t make medical sense – nothing is adding up,” Louise told PA Real Life.
“He was running around, playing football, and now he’s unconscious and there’s no sign of illness.”
Henry’s condition deteriorated rapidly, to the point where he suffered “irreversible brain damage”.
He couldn’t speak at all, he just couldn’t say anything
Richard Taylor
Despite undergoing neurosurgery, the couple knew he “wasn’t going to make it”.
They then faced an agonising two days, “watching Henry die slowly”, before they said their goodbyes on November 22 – just four days after first being admitted to hospital.
Now, more than four years on, the couple said they are “still heartbroken” but they want to share their story to help raise more awareness around encephalitis.
They are are urging doctors and parents to educate themselves on the symptoms of the brain condition “because you could save a life”.
It comes after Professor Tom Solomon, chair of Neurology at the University of Liverpool warned Sun Health that hundreds of children could die of the brain swelling disease that’s been linked to measles unless more kids are vaccinated.
Louise said: “If someone hears our story, please find out about encephalitis, especially if you work in the medical profession.
“Please log on, find out what the symptoms are, and the causes, because you could save a life.”
Richard added: “We’re still heartbroken and I’m always sad, even when I’m happy. You see the world through this lens of sadness now.
“We’re coping better, year on year, but the sense of loss and sadness is enormous.”
A rapid deterioration
Louise and Richard described Henry as a “beautiful, wonderful little boy”, who was full of energy, creative, caring and affectionate, and he loved playing football and the guitar.
He was “fit and active” and had suffered no health complications until this point – and this made his rapid deterioration in November 2019 all the more “shocking”.
In the weeks prior, Henry displayed flu-like symptoms and was occasionally “disorientated”, confused and suffered short-term memory loss, but the couple did not think anything was “seriously wrong”.
They took him to his GP, who suggested a referral to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS), but it all changed when Henry was suddenly unable to speak.
“We took him to A&E and he couldn’t answer any questions,” Louise said.
“The nurse asked him, ‘Do you know where you are?’ He couldn’t say the hospital. Then she said, ‘Do you know who I am?’ And he said, ‘no’.
“He knew who we were but he couldn’t make sense of anything else.”
After running some tests at North Middlesex University Hospital, doctors could not find any signs of a bacterial or viral infection in his bloods, and they decided to monitor him.
But during the night, Richard said it was “becoming more and more apparent that something was deeply, deeply wrong”.
I just remember lying on the floor and screaming and shouting and beating the walls
Richard Taylor
“He couldn’t speak at all, he just couldn’t say anything, and I was really anxious because I kept trying to talk to him and he just wasn’t able to speak,” Richard said.
Louise and Richard took it in turns to look after their son but on the second day in hospital Henry had a seizure, which was “frightening”, and he lost consciousness.
Staff then “flooded” into the room to stabilise him, and Louise asked herself: “Is he going to die?”
Richard added: “It had gone from something where they were monitoring him, everything seemed relaxed, and then suddenly they were fighting to save his life and it was full-on panic.”
Doctors then discovered Henry had fluid on his lungs, likening it to him having “pneumonia equivalent to the age of a 90-year-old”, and he was transferred by ambulance to St Mary’s.
When they mentioned his lungs, Richard said he almost felt relieved that they had identified the problem – but this, the couple soon realised, was a “false sense of security”.
Doctors then planned for Henry to have an MRI but instead he ended up having emergency neurosurgery, leaving Louise and Richard praying for his survival.
The couple were in a “heightened state of trauma for hours” – and although he survived the surgery, they were then told there was nothing more that could be done to save him.
Even at this point, Henry had not been diagnosed and, although his death on November 22 was “peaceful”, the couple were left with many unanswered questions.
Henry had gone from playing football on the Saturday to dying six days later – and Richard likened it to being “struck by lightning”.
“There was a feeling of helplessness constantly, and panic and uncertainty, and although it felt peaceful when we said goodbye to Henry, I was in so much shock,” Louise said.
Richard added: “When they told us he was going to die, I just went to a place of complete and utter despair.
“I just remember lying on the floor and screaming and shouting and beating the walls. I was in so much pain that it felt like my body couldn’t hold it.
“When Henry passed away, it was peaceful, but then it was a mixture of shock, numbness and despair, and this surreal edge that you’ll never see your child again.”
‘Life is fragile’
Encephalitis is caused either by an infection invading the brain, such as the herpes-simplex virus or measles, or through the immune system attacking the brain, and in a third of cases, the cause is unknown, Encephalitis International said.
Symptoms can include an altered level of consciousness, personality or behavioural change, fever and a new persistent headache.
But according to a new survey commissioned by the charity, eight in 10 (82%) A&E doctors and nurses in the UK are unable to recognise autoimmune encephalitis.
This was the case for Louise and Richard, and they only received confirmation of Henry’s diagnosis after his “devastating” death via a post-mortem report in February 2020.
To this day, they still do not know what caused Henry’s encephalitis – and this is why they feel strongly about raising awareness of the condition.
Symptoms of encephalitis to know
ENCEPHALITIS usually starts off with flu-like symptoms, such as a high temperature and headache.
More serious symptoms come on over hours, days or weeks, including:
Confusion or disorientation
Seizures or fits
Changes in personality and behaviour (is the person acting like themselves?)
Difficulty speaking
Weakness or loss of movement in some parts of the body
Loss of consciousness
Dial 999 for an ambulance immediately if you or someone else has these serious symptoms.
Louise and Richard said they are still healing, and although life is “bittersweet”, they feel it is important to have “things to look forward to or focus on” while navigating grief.
They go to concerts, spend quality time with their daughter Giselle, 15, and they have even done some fundraising for Encephalitis International, raising more than £6,000.
Now, they wish to share the message to others navigating loss that they are not alone, and they want to thank the charities and organisations who have supported them along the way.
They are also grateful for the amazing staff at the hospitals who “did everything they could to help save Henry”.
Richard said: “One of the only reflections this gives you is that I now look back and realise I had everything; we were so fortunate and blessed to have the life we did.
“Now I realise how fragile life is, and you realise thousands of people go through what we’re going through, and it makes you appreciate the things you didn’t before.”
Encephalitis International is determined to increase awareness among medical professionals through training programmes which will provide the tools for them to better recognise and treat encephalitis.
The charity is urging people to wear red on World Encephalitis Day on February 22 and use #Red4WED and #WorldEncephalitisDay on social media.
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeRichard said losing Henry made him realise how fragile life is[/caption]
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real Life“He was running around, playing football, and now he’s unconscious and there’s no sign of illness,” Louise said[/caption]
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeThe parents are now urging people to be aware of the symptoms of encephalitis to help save lives[/caption]
Katrina Campbell Photography/PA Real LifeRichard cuddling Henry[/caption]