Andy
Senior Member (Voting rights)
"Rugby had defined Burton's life, but she was soon given a "new perspective".
Burton, who made her England debut aged 18, says she first noticed a change in her behaviour when she started to feel "really down" and had no energy."
"She remembers being put on anti-depressants because "the first thing people go to is mental health"."
"Then - on 15 June 2022 - she suffered her first fitting seizure, while sitting at the dinner table with her mum.
After being assessed in hospital she was discharged as it was her first seizure and "could also be the last".
But her behaviour would change significantly.
"I went from being a timid, unresponsive person, to really quite manic behaviour," she says. "I was really aggressive towards my parents, siblings and even the dog.""
"After more seizures, Burton was sectioned, and says doctors thought she had stress-induced psychosis."
"Burton spent 26 days in Fieldhead - a psychiatric hospital in Wakefield - and her behaviour continued to deteriorate.
"I was being treated for psychosis, basically," she says. "They didn't rule out an autoimmune illness, but they didn't test me for it either."
Burton's behaviour and seizures did not improve until her father was approached by a member of the autoimmune diseases research staff who had reviewed her notes.
"He came up to my dad and said: 'I think your daughter has something physical, I don't think it's mental."
After tests, Burton was diagnosed with autoimmune encephalitis, which occurs when the body's immune system mistakenly attacks the brain."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/64876477
Burton, who made her England debut aged 18, says she first noticed a change in her behaviour when she started to feel "really down" and had no energy."
"She remembers being put on anti-depressants because "the first thing people go to is mental health"."
"Then - on 15 June 2022 - she suffered her first fitting seizure, while sitting at the dinner table with her mum.
After being assessed in hospital she was discharged as it was her first seizure and "could also be the last".
But her behaviour would change significantly.
"I went from being a timid, unresponsive person, to really quite manic behaviour," she says. "I was really aggressive towards my parents, siblings and even the dog.""
"After more seizures, Burton was sectioned, and says doctors thought she had stress-induced psychosis."
"Burton spent 26 days in Fieldhead - a psychiatric hospital in Wakefield - and her behaviour continued to deteriorate.
"I was being treated for psychosis, basically," she says. "They didn't rule out an autoimmune illness, but they didn't test me for it either."
Burton's behaviour and seizures did not improve until her father was approached by a member of the autoimmune diseases research staff who had reviewed her notes.
"He came up to my dad and said: 'I think your daughter has something physical, I don't think it's mental."
After tests, Burton was diagnosed with autoimmune encephalitis, which occurs when the body's immune system mistakenly attacks the brain."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/64876477