Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Yasmin Harisha

Mum, 40, who thought she had small cough wakes up with half her face paralysed

A mum who went to bed with a cough and woke up with half her face paralysed has shared her shocking before and after photos.

Vhari King was convinced she was having a stroke when she couldn't use the right side of her face.

The 40-year-old had experienced a cough four days prior "but didn't think anything of it" until she woke up the following day.

Vhari, who is a cardiology nurse at Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital, said: "I had no idea what was going on, I just thought I had to get on with it.

"I couldn't drink my coffee, it was just dribbling out of my mouth and when I was trying to do my mascara to get ready for work, it just wouldn't go on - my eye was so irritated."

The mum pictured before half her face was paralysed (SWNS.com)
She burst into tears when she asked a doctor if she would be able to smile again and he couldn't give an answer (SWNS.com)

Paramedic claimed injured patient was suffering from 'dying P**i syndrome'

Doctors diagnosed Vhari with Ramsay Hunt syndrome August last year - a rare form of shingles that attacks the facial nerves.

The mum-of-two said: "I was scared. I couldn't leave the house because I couldn't shut my eye in case it was windy, and I had to tape my eye down every night otherwise I would sleep with one eye open.

"I remember asking the doctor if I would be able to smile again and he couldn't give me an answer, I just burst into tears.

"I couldn't bare any noise. I literally went from being the life and soul of the party to being a recluse."

Her symptoms started in August last year when she was suffering from tickly dry cough - but thought she was just run down from work and her personal life.

She had to tape her eye shut every night or it wouldn't close (SWNS.com)

  Teen fined for trying to kill herself is told she caused 'massive inconvenience'

She said: "All I had was a sore throat . I didn't think anything of it I am a busy mum and a nurse.

"I just thought I should take some painkillers because when I had a look in my mouth I couldn't see anything wrong - I saw these tiny blisters but you just don't think.

"And then I was driving on my way back from work and I was drinking a can of Irn-Bru and I was thinking this just isn't tasting right, it was like the flavour just wasn't there."

Vhari has been diagnosed with Ramsay Hunt syndrome (SWNS.com)

But the next morning, when she woke she couldn't move the right side of her face.

Vhari, who lives with her husband Dan and two children Lucia, eight, and Byron, five, in Horsford, Norwich, said: "I was in shock as I honestly had no idea what was wrong.

"I looked in the mirror and my face started to droop, I couldn't move the right side of my face and my right eye was so irritated. It couldn't stop watering.

The 40-year-old had experienced a cough four days prior to this "but didn't think anything of it" (SWNS.com)
She was left horrified after what felt like a simple cough left her unable to use the right side of her face (SWNS.com)

Good Samaritan lost job and marriage after woman falsely accused him of sex attack  

"But typically I just kept going. I just thought I would go to work.

"But as I was trying to drink my coffee on the way to work but it was just going all over my face.

"I just thought I have to go to A&E because I thought I was having a stroke. I couldn't talk and I couldn't smile.

"And as soon as I arrived they looked at me and got the stroke team to come over immediately."

Vhari says she was referred for a blood test, ECG, blood pressure , and urgent CT scan but results came back and nothing appeared to be wrong.

She was then referred to the neurology department in which they noted it was Ramsey Hunt syndrome.

She said: "They saw that I had blisters in the roof of my mouth and in my ears. They said I think it is Ramsey Hunt syndrome and I was then referred to the ENT (ear nose and throat department).

A blister in her mouth which is a sign of Ramsay Hunt syndrome (SWNS.com)

Girl, 16, kills herself after friends vote 'die' in life or death Instagram poll  

"They gave me 16 tablets to take a day, but I couldn't swallow and I couldn't drink, so that was really difficult.

"And it was once I got home, that is when it all went down hill. I was in bed for four weeks.

"I was suffering from exhaustion, I just slept for hours and hours and I was just so disorientated.

"I had an abscess in my mouth and I didn't know about it and when I was brushing my teeth, I couldn't feel what I was doing and I pulled my tooth out.

"Everything was just horrible."

Ramsay Hunt syndrome is a rare form of shingles that attacks the facial nerves (SWNS.com)

  Mum cruelly trolled for wearing full face of make-up four days after giving birth

Vhari was taking a mixture of medicines including painkillers, eye drops, steroids and antiviral medication.

She was signed off from work for five months, as the condition causes fatigue, hearing problems and vertigo in addition to the pain and facial paralysis.

But now she is able smile again Vhari wants to raise awareness for Ramsay Hunt syndrome because if untreated for longer the 72 hours the person may experience more permanent side effects.

Vhari, who also runs an online makeup business called Younique, said: "I would really like to raise awareness about this because it affected me working.

"How could I show people what makeup I loved when I hated my face and hid from the world."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.