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A 24-year-old woman, who has already battled cancer twice, found herself facing a new health crisis after sampling homemade fermented swordfish at a friend’s dinner gathering.
Trinity Peterson-Mayes, a resident of Arizona, joined her friends for a meal last month where they decided to taste a companion’s homemade fermented fish dish.
Recalling the experience to 12 News, Peterson-Mayes described the fish as having an unpleasant taste. “It tasted horrible, I’m going to be so honest,” she admitted.
Despite the taste, she decided to give it a try, thinking, “It’s supposed to be healthy, and I figured I might as well try. If it’s bad, I’ll just get a bad stomach ache.”
However, the aftermath was far more severe than she anticipated. A few days later, Peterson-Mayes struggled to drink water. Within a day, she was completely unable to hydrate herself, she shared with the news outlet.
After nearly choking on coffee and finding herself struggling to speak, she went to the hospital, where her symptoms rapidly worsened, her mother wrote on GoFundMe.Â
At the first hospital she visited, doctors were stumped trying to figure out what was ailing the 24-year-old and were considering discharging her.Â
Feeling certain that something wasn’t right, Peterson-Mayes was transferred to a neurological institute, where doctors diagnosed her with botulism.Â
Trinity Peterson-Mayes, 24, and two of her other friends were diagnosed with botulism, a rare neurotoxin, after eating a companion’s homemade fermented swordfishÂ
Within days of eating the ‘horrible’ swordfish, Peterson-Mayes found herself unable to swallow and struggled to talk. She was taken to the hospital, where she was put on a ventilator until an antitoxin could be administratedÂ
Two more of her friends would also be diagnosed with the disease. Â
Botulism is a rare neurotoxin that can cause paralysis, and a condition most doctors have only ever encountered in medical textbooks.Â
The rare toxin typically comes from improperly canned food, especially during the home canning process. It can also form in wounds.Â
‘I woke up, and I had three IVs. I was intubated, I had a central line in my neck, and I had an NG tube… and I just woke up, and I couldn’t move at all. It was very scary,’ Peterson-Mayes told 12 News. Â
Doctors had to put her on a ventilator to protect her airway while they waited for the life-saving antitoxin to be delivered from a different state, her mother said.Â
After receiving the medication, the paralysis stopped progressing, and Peterson-Mayes is now on the road to recovery.Â
The ordeal has left her scared to eat canned food again, and even sushi now frightens her.Â
‘I don’t know about that anymore,’ she told 12 News.Â
Her full recovery will take months, as she has to learn how to swallow again and will need extensive rehabilitation, the fundraiser, which has garnered more than $9,700, said.Â
Peterson-Mayes is a two-time childhood cancer survivorÂ
She was first diagnosed with neuroblastoma at two months old. She was later diagnosed with osteosarcoma at 11Â
Her full recovery from botulism is expected to take months as she has to learn how to swallow again and regain her strengthÂ
Peterson-Mayes was released from the hospital on March 10, but is undergoing an inpatient rehabilitation program. Â
‘She is already fighting hard every day to regain the basic abilities most of us take for granted – speaking, swallowing, and moving normally again,’ her mother said. Â
‘Even through all of this, Trinity continues to show the same strength and resilience that helped her survive cancer twice as a child.’Â
She was first diagnosed with neuroblastoma, a rare childhood cancer, when she was just two months old.Â
She was later diagnosed with osteosarcoma, an aggressive bone cancer, when she was 11.Â