Seaweed victim's emergency heart surgery
Last updated 10:10 09/02/2011

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TOXIC MEAL: Amanda Eliason, right, is in intensive care after heart surgery. Emma Langlands, left, was less seriously ill after eating a different meal.
HOLIDAY TRAGEDY: Sarah Carter died after eating toxic seaweed meal.
The friend of a Wellington woman who died after eating toxic seaweed is slowly recovering after requiring emergency heart surgery in Thailand, her family says.
Amanda Eliason, 24, and Sarah Carter, 23, became ill on Friday after eating seaweed they bought from a food market in Chiang Mai, in northern Thailand.
Ms Carter died at Chiang Mai Ram Hospital on Sunday morning. A third friend, Emma Langlands, 23, who ordered a different meal, also suffered food poisoning but is not seriously ill.
Ms Eliason's parents, Peter and Kay, from Kaponga, 19km southwest of Stratford, flew to Thailand on Monday to be with their daughter, who is recovering from emergency heart surgery in intensive care.
"We're taking each day as it comes... they won't allow her to fly [home] until they are very sure that - because of the heart - she's very ready to fly,'' Kay Eliason told Radio New Zealand this morning.
She said doctors had taken blood samples but were still unsure what caused the illness.
Grandmother Val Eliason said Ms Eliason had successfully undergone a heart procedure to help "get her blood circulating".
"The latest when I spoke to Amanda is that she is improving and she hopes to be moved out of intensive care into a regular ward soon.
"I was surprised when I spoke to her, she was bright, she was comfortable. She said the hospital and the doctors have been wonderful. She said they had been so thorough with everything to do with her health."
Ms Eliason had been working at the Ministry of Economic Development in Wellington before going on holiday to South East Asia with her two friends.
Ms Langlands' father, Hamilton accountant Rick Langlands, said the incident had stunned everyone involved.
"No words can express how sorry we are for Sarah's family," he said.
"In a situation like this we are absolutely powerless."
His wife Margaret and son Samuel had also travelled to Thailand.
"It is just so unusual when you look at it. Emma was the least affected but was still seriously ill herself."
He expected her to be discharged from hospital within a couple of days.
"But knowing my daughter she won't want to leave Amanda. She will very likely spend time with her, even though her mother and father are now there as well."
TRIBUTES FLOW
Meanwhile, friends and family have paid tribute to the "beautiful and lovely" Ms Carter.
Ms Carter's father, Richard, said yesterday he had been told the toxin that killed his daughter was extremely rare.
"They get one death every two years, but it seems only the tourists get it, the locals are immune to it."
Mr Carter said it appeared all three women had bought meals at a "curry place" in Chiang Mai's food market.
He and his wife, Anne, got a call at their home in Auckland on Friday from the Chiang Mai Ram Hospital, saying their daughter was ill.
"We spoke with her about 10pm that night and it appeared to be just bad food poisoning. But within an hour of our conversation the thing just spread to her heart and strangled her heart."
He said her heart was functioning at only 10 per cent of its capacity but she struggled on and survived the night.
"I managed to get a few calls to Sarah in the meantime, but she had all this stuff down her throat and she couldn't talk to me."
She died on Sunday night, at 3.30am Thai time.
Mr Carter said his wife was in transit at Bangkok Airport and he had to call and tell her the news.
Ms Carter is survived by her 19-year-old brother Ryan and 17-year-old sister Nicole. The Carters were expecting their daughter's body to be returned home on Friday and funeral services were being planned in Auckland and Wellington.
Tributes to her flowed in yesterday, with friend Anna Smith saying: "Our beautiful Sez. We could not have had a more beautiful friend. You were there for all of us, even in the middle of the night with no explanation. I love you, and will miss you forever."
Ms Carter, who was raised in Auckland and attended Macleans College, graduated from Victoria University with an accountancy degree and had been working at BDO Spicer in Wellington.
The director of neurology at Chulalongkorn University Hospital in Bangkok, Thiravat Hemachudha, said the seaweed toxin was "extremely rare".
The term probably referred to the cigutera toxin, which could be found in certain types of seaweed around Thailand.
Fish, commonly sea bass or sea eels, could eat the poisonous seaweed without harm but the toxin remained inside them and could be passed on to anyone eating them.
Dr Winai Wananukul from the Poison Control Centre in Bangkok said the clinical features of Ms Carter's case suggested her death was caused by "heart dysfunction".
"Possible causes of the fatal illness include poisoning from toxic substance or toxin, infective process is not completely excluded."