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Mosquito Bite Triggers Chronic Illness in British Man Post-Holiday


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Posted

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Picture of Ross Constable courtesy of The Daily Mail

 

A seemingly harmless mosquito bite during a dream holiday in Thailand turned nightmarish for Ross Constable, a 48-year-old art teacher from Timperley, Cheshire. Upon returning from his family trip to Phuket, Ross began experiencing severe symptoms, initially resembling flu. After extensive tests, he was diagnosed with dengue fever—a mosquito-borne illness known in tropical regions.

 

However, it wasn't just dengue that changed Constable's life. He developed Tourette’s syndrome, a neurological disorder marked by tics that drastically impacted his daily life. While dengue fever doesn't directly cause Tourette’s, the neurological complications from his condition may have triggered it.

 

 

 

Constable faced a cascade of health issues including anxiety, depression, and PTSD-like symptoms, which he tackles with support from family and friends, deciding against medication that left him feeling detached. Now, he uses his art as an outlet, with an upcoming exhibit at Hepplestone Art Gallery in Wilmslow on May 8. This aims to inspire others through the healing power of nature, support, and self-acceptance.

 

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Picture of Phuket Old Town courtesy of BucketListly

 

Constable’s story highlights the unforeseen dangers lurking behind a single mosquito bite, offering a poignant reminder of the unpredictability of life and the resilience of the human spirit. His journey through illness and recovery illustrates that strength can emerge from the most unexpected places, reported The Thaiger.

 

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-- 2025-03-17

 

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Posted
28 minutes ago, snoop1130 said:

A seemingly harmless mosquito bite during a dream holiday in Thailand turned nightmarish for Ross Constable, a 48-year-old art teacher from Timperley, Cheshire. Upon returning from his family trip to Phuket, Ross began experiencing severe symptoms, initially resembling flu. After extensive tests, he was diagnosed with dengue fever—a mosquito-borne illness known in tropical regions.

 

These mozzies are nasty little critters.

A friend had a mosquito bite that eventually led to Guillain-Barré syndrome.

He eventually become totally paralysed and in an ICU for a couple of months.

Still not fully recovered 20 years later.

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Posted
20 minutes ago, Cameroni said:

Nothing good ever comes from Phuket. There, I said it.

Not quite true.

I went there and had an eye lens replacement procedure at Bangkok Hospital Phuket.

Tri-focal lenses.

My eyesight is better now than it was 50 years ago.

I no longer need glasses and cataracts gone.

 

Mind you, you can also get this procedure in Bangkok.

Posted
1 hour ago, roo860 said:

So, he'd been in Thailand and been bitten by a mosquito, quite easy to understand if you can read.

Yes, but take the statistics about how many times a mosquito bite triggers Tourette´s syndrome. It´s more likely that it was there already from early age and just happened to be triggered at that time. Coincidence. 

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Posted

Dengue is no joke. I was lucky enough to get it when i was young. Dont live anywhere dirty, is the best way to avoid it

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Posted

A relative got malaria in the brain after visiting Koh Samet. She went insane for a while and was sectioned by her husband until the doctors figured out what was wrong. 

This is a tropical country. Expecting it to be similar to the west, can lead to trouble. Mosquito repellent is better than nothing. 

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Posted
19 hours ago, Gottfrid said:

Sure, blame Thailand and the mosquito´s.

 

This isn't about 'blaming Thailand'...  I read the story as about highlighting the risks of mosquitos here, particularly the risk of contracting Dengue Fever - something many tourists may be unaware of....  I'm particularly cautious of my son catching it (when outdoors a lot at his school).

 

Its not a 'Thai bash' just because someone contracts Dengue fever in Thailand, its just a Thailand related story thats all... 

 

 

 

Posted

How was it determined that he got the bite in question in Thailand? A mosquito bite can take up to 1 year before malaria becomes evident. Getting a bite today does not mean, if it is a malaria carrying mosquito, you will get the symptoms within a short time span.

Posted
37 minutes ago, Photoguy21 said:

How was it determined that he got the bite in question in Thailand? A mosquito bite can take up to 1 year before malaria becomes evident. Getting a bite today does not mean, if it is a malaria carrying mosquito, you will get the symptoms within a short time span.

 

I'm going to take a wild guess at this one,.... 

 

British Guy travelled to Thailand for a holiday and got bitten my a Mosquito carrying Dengue Fever, developed a fever by the time he got home and was diagnosed with 'Dengue Fever'.... 

 

Hardly a stretch of the imagination...  

 

Dengue Fever has an incubation period of approx 4-10 days (its not Malaria).

Posted

Hotsun appears to be under a missapprehension that unclean areas are are synonymous with mosquitos.There is no connection.Mosquito borne deases are found in the best suburbs of some of the best cities in the world. If the the breeding conditions are right and the specie of  mosquito is pesent they will multiply  and spread the deases that that species carries. 

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