about viral meningitis. Well as it happens in my experience not a great deal. I contracted it in July 2002 (July 13th as it happens, sort of stuck in my brain if you see what I mean) and was seriously ill in hospital with the sort of stats that make nurses take a sharp intake of breath. My eldest daughter is a student nurse so i can speak from experience!
When I contracted the illness I was very fit, training for the South Coast Triathlon and generally very active. My fitness and the resillience of my body and heart apparently was a contributory factor in my survival. By the third day of the attack and after much IV morphine and not really remembering much the hospital decided that I was well enough to go home; I wasn't really in a position to argue but I am told that they said I would be OK in a couple of weeks. That was on the Monday, on the Thursday I was rushed back in under blues and twos with collapsing veins, rapidly reducing blood pressure and heart rate dropping. I wasn't kept it but was sent home later that night. Fortunately I had BUPA and was able to see an eminent neurologist quick quickly afterwards who sent me for a brain scan and concluded that I was by no means stable. He complained to the hospital and ordered me to stay in bed for six weeks, moving as little as possible and with instructions to me my family to call 999 if I felt dizzy, light headed or was difficult to rouse.
After the six weeks I felt very tired, very emotional and could barely walk. The locum GP at my surgery who saw me to sign me off said that I was obviously malingering as the effects of meningitis should clear after a month at worst. At which point I asked him point blank if he had ever treated a patient with VM, following a bit of waffle and a bit more pushing he finally admitted he that he hadn't. Duly pointed in the direction of the Trust's website I made an appointment to go back and see him the next day. Voila signed off for a month.
Then I had to repeat the whole exercise again, and again and again. Welll I say I in all of this but I don't actually remember and it was my wife that did everything but I'm sure you get the drift.
In December I went back to work, not really out of choice but my salary had been cut because I had been off work so long. I was advised not to undertake any strenuous exercise for up to 5 years because of the risk of instability in my brain. I had long periods when my brain 'dropped out' and I didn't know where I was, more than once when speaking in public, and even now I have to watch my working hours.
I see many people that have had VM after me (there's a Facebook group called 'I had viral meningitis' who have had the same experience as me, doctors that think it's either minor or they'll get over it in a month. 9 years later I still have side effects (headache, tiredness, mild photophobia,) and I have developed odd intolerances to things like cocoa and alcohol. Last year I was diagnosed with Mollaret's Meningitis which the doctor didn't know about either. So what do doctors know? Not as much as you'd have thought and don't be afraid to challenge them as say 'What do you know about viral meningitis and have you ever treated someone with it'. That way you'll see that you need to educate them to get the treatment you should have and a better understanding of this illness.