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UP Woman Thought Brain-Dead Revives in Ambulance as Doctors Suspect Neurotoxin

Neurologists say later recovery indicates the earlier diagnosis was not true brain death.

Overview

  • The family says the 50-year-old began breathing again on February 24 after an ambulance jolt near Hafizganj on NH‑74, a pothole claim the National Highways Authority of India has denied.
  • After the incident she was admitted to Neurocity Hospital in Pilibhit, where tests detected heavy neurotoxins and doctors treated her for a suspected snake or toxic insect bite, including anti‑venom.
  • She improved over roughly 12–13 days of intensive care, was discharged earlier this week, and is now awake and speaking at home, according to her husband and treating clinicians.
  • Records from the earlier Bareilly hospitalization documented absent brainstem reflexes, dilated pupils and a Glasgow Coma Scale score of three, indicating deep unresponsiveness at that time.
  • Independent specialists caution that true brain death is irreversible and say the reported recovery points to an initial misdiagnosis rather than a pothole effect.