A woman claimed to eat a popular food while on vacation gave her a Victorian disease, so she was unable to walk and in the hospital for three weeks.
Danielle Hendricks, 32, initially had stomach problems while traveling in India, but didn’t think much about it.
In a video posted on her tap -page @dhen.mua, which was viewed more than 400,000 times, she revealed that she paid ‘Topdollar’ for Sashimi, a Japanese delicacy consisting of slices of raw fish, in Delhi India.
So in the caption she said, despite eating a public restaurant ‘who looked and tastes suspect’, she forced herself to eat it.
When she returned to Melbourne in Australia, she continued to suffer from fatigue, nausea, dizziness and loss of appetite, which she easily laid to adapt to local food and water.
But her condition deteriorated, with her suffering more pain after the gym than normal and lower back the tightness.
Then, suddenly at home, while he started a customer in February in February, the hair and make -up artist at Black -Out, she loses the eyesight and became very short.
After they had completed and lying down to rest, she realized that she could no longer get up for three hours.
Mrs. Hendricks was not able to stand in the hospital for weeks or to walk in debilitating pain
While her pain deteriorated, she called an ambulance that brought her to the hospital where doctors eventually told her that she had typhus.
This was after weeks of bedridden with debilitating muscle spasms, because the painkillers she received gave little relief.
The bleeding disease that Koningin Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert, killed famous, can be fatal if it is not treated quickly.
It is caused by a kind of salmonella bacteria that are usually spread by food and water with the urine or faeces of an infected person.
Most British cases are linked to trips to India, Bangladesh or Pakistan, where the disease occurs more often.
In her case, she believes that the source of the bacteria “could have been the water that was used to thaw the Sashimi” that she had ordered while traveling.
After her diagnosis, due to ‘the most unbearable pain’, she again had to learn how to stand and walk.
She had a rare complication from typhus called septic arthritis, which is a serious joint infection.

The 32-year-old had the debilitating task of learning again how to stand and walk after he got sick
Symptoms include severe joint pain, swelling, redness, limited movement and often fever.
The very rare infection had spread to its hip joint, causing serious inflammation and was treated with antibiotics for six weeks.
It follows last month warning of health officials that cases of typhus have reached a record level in Great Britain.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) registered 702 cases of typhus and a related disease called Paratyfoid Fever in 2024.
This was an increase of eight percent compared to the previous year and is the highest number of registered cases.
Ukhsa officials also warned that there was also a rise of antibiotic-resistant typhus in Pakistan.
This is a tribe that has adapted immunity to the drug that is used to treat it, which means that people infected with this tension have rather serious complications.
A fifth of typhoid cases worldwide is fatal worldwide, although this is rarer in countries such as the UK.
Symptoms of a typhoid infection usually develop between one to two weeks after a person is infected.
It initially causes flu -like symptoms such as fever, headache, pains, fatigue, a cough but also constipation.
After this first wave, the symptoms get worse, with the addition of nausea, diarrhea and sometimes a rash. It is at this stage that a patient runs a high risk of potentially fatal complications.
In treatment, such as antibiotics, the infection is usually disappeared within three to five days.
Travelers were also advised to take measures such as drinking bottle water, avoiding ice in drinks and not to eat raw fruit and vegetables while they are in affected areas.
It came when health officials also warned that the number of people infected with Salmonella in the UK had risen to a record high.
The last figures revealed that cases in 2024 had risen by almost a fifth in a single year to more than 10,000 cases.
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