Brain on fire My month of madness

Susannah Cahalan

Book - 2013

One day in 2009, twenty-four-old Susannah Cahalan woke up alone in a strange hospital room, strapped to her bed, under guard, and unable to move or speak. A wristband marked her as a "flight risk," and her medical records, chronicling a monthlong hospital stay of which she had no memory at all, showed hallucinations, violence, and dangerous instability. Only weeks earlier, Susannah had been on the threshold of a new, adult life, a healthy, ambitious college grad a few months into her first serious relationship and a promising career as a cub reporter at a major New York newspaper. Who was the stranger who had taken over her body? What was happening to her mind? In this narrative, Susannah tells the astonishing true story of her in...explicable descent into madness and the lifesaving diagnosis that nearly didn't happen. A team of doctors would spend a month, and more than a million dollars, trying desperately to pin down a medical explanation for what had gone wrong. Meanwhile, as the days passed and her family, boyfriend, and friends helplessly stood watch by her bed, she began to move inexorably through psychosis into catatonia and, ultimately, toward death. Yet even as this period nearly tore her family apart, it offered an extraordinary testament to their faith in Susannah and their refusal to let her go. Then, neurologist Souhel Najjar joined her team and, with he help of a lucky, ingenious test, saved her life. He recognized the symptoms of a newly discovered autoimmune disorder in which the body attacks th brain, a disease now thought to be tied to both schizophrenia and autism, and perhaps the root of "demonic possessions" throughout history. This story is the powerful account of one woman's struggle to recapture her identity and to rediscover herself among the fragments left behind. Using all her considerable journalistic skills, and building from hospital records and surveillance video, interviews with family and friends, and excerpts from the deeply moving journal her father kept during her illness, Susannah pieces together the story of her "lost month" to write an unforgettable memoir about memory and identity, faith and love.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Susannah Cahalan (-)
Edition
1st Simon & Schuster trade pbk. ed
Item Description
"With a new afterword"--Cover.
Originally published in hardcover by Free Press, 2012. Hardcover edition has different pagination.
Physical Description
xiv, 266 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781451621389
9781451621372
  • Author's Note
  • Preface
  • Part 1. Crazy
  • Chapter 1. Bedbug Blues
  • Chapter 2. The Girl in the Black Lace Bra
  • Chapter 3. Carota
  • Chapter 4. The Wrestler
  • Chapter 5. Gold Roses
  • Chapter 6. America's Most Wanted
  • Chapter 7. On the Road Again
  • Chapter 8. Out-of-Body Experience
  • Chapter 9. A Touch of Madness
  • Chapter 10. Mixed Episodes
  • Chapter 11. Keppra
  • Chapter 12. The Ruse
  • Chapter 13. Buddha
  • Chapter 14. Search and Seizure
  • Part 2. The Clock
  • Chapter 15. The Capgras Delusion
  • Chapter 16. Postictal Fury
  • Chapter 17. Multiple Personality Disorder
  • Chapter 18. Breaking News
  • Chapter 19. Big Man
  • Chapter 20. The Slope of the Line
  • Chapter 21. Death with Interruptions
  • Chapter 22. A Beautiful Mess
  • Chapter 23. Dr. Najjar
  • Chapter 24. IVIG
  • Chapter 25. Blue Devil Fit
  • Chapter 26. The Clock
  • Chapter 27. Brain Biopsy
  • Chapter 28. Shadowboxer
  • Chapter 29. Dalmau's Disease
  • Chapter 30. Rhubarb
  • Chapter 31. The Big Reveal
  • Chapter 32. 90 Percent
  • Chapter 33. Homecoming
  • Chapter 34. California Dreamin'
  • Part 3. In Search of Lost Time
  • Chapter 35. The Videotape
  • Chapter 36. Stuffed Animals
  • Chapter 37. Wild at Heart
  • Chapter 38. Friends
  • Chapter 39. Within Normal Limits
  • Chapter 40. Umbrella
  • Chapter 41. Chronology
  • Chapter 42. Infinite Jest
  • Chapter 43. NDMA
  • Chapter 44. Partial Return
  • Chapter 45. The Five W's
  • Chapter 46. Grand Rounds
  • Chapter 47. The Exorcist
  • Chapter 48. Survivor's Guilt
  • Chapter 49. Hometown Boy Makes Good
  • Chapter 50. Ecstatic
  • Chapter 51. Flight Risk?
  • Chapter 52. Madame
  • Chapter 53. The Purple Lady
  • Afterword
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

IN the vast and growing literature of affliction there is essentially one story: how the writer and her loved ones made it through. From a literary point of view, everything depends on the sensibility of the narrator, her comportment both as the teller and as the main character in her own tale. The reader's resistance to these stories can be strong. Severe illness, by its nature, narrows the focus; the palette of experience both intensifies and shrinks; we crawl into the bush, figuratively speaking, and wait out our fate, fighting to survive. There is little suspense: the existence of the memoir is testament to the fact that the author has lived to tell the tale. But what hard-won nugget of wisdom has she brought back from her brief descent into a hell that most of us, for now, have been lucky enough to avoid? Can she give her ordeal meaning beyond the brute fact of the thing itself? One thing you don't want to be to your doctor is "an interesting case." Susannah Cabalan had the bad luck of being a unique and baffling one: profoundly sick, deteriorating with dangerous speed, yet her MRIs, brain scans and blood tests were normal. "My diagnosis had been discussed in almost every major medical journal," she tells us with an air of pride and exhausted wonder, "including the New England Journal of Medicine, and The New York Times." "Brain on Fire" is at its most captivating when describing the torturous process of how doctors arrived at that diagnosis - an extremely rare autoimmune disease almost undocumented in medical literature. The illness presented itself in malevolent fashion, with symptoms of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, which are often indistinguishable from each other in their early stages: grandiosity, paranoia, bouts of irrational rage, incomprehensible utterances and flat catatonic-like affect. There were also seizures, with "blood and foam" spurting out of Cahalan's mouth, that suggested not mental illness but a neurological disorder. Cahalan has the narrative advantage of having no memory of what happened to her, except for unreliable, almost hallucinatory flashes, like being strapped to her hospital bed as a "flight risk." This temporary outage gives her an opportunity to ponder the mystery of her self, and how quickly our assumed knowledge of who we are can be radically altered. Cahalan employs her journalistic skills (she works as a reporter at The New York Post) to explain the fascinating medical intricacies of her illness and how it compromises NMDA receptors in the brain, "vital to learning, memory, and behavior." Of deeper interest is her attempt to become a historian of her lost self, piecing together the facts of her ordeal from her father's diaries, the recollections of her mother and her boyfriend, and the forensic evidence of medical and psychological records. Looking at hospital videos, she is shocked to see a young woman she can barely recognize as herself, cowering in bed and uttering repeatedly, and with difficulty, the word "please," as if begging for help. Reading her own disjointed diary entries of the time "is like peering into a stranger's stream of consciousness." SALVATION came in the form of a gifted neurologist, profoundly attuned to her symptoms, and the decisive diagnostic tool turned out to be a piece of paper and pen: Cahalan's skewed drawing of a clock revealed more about what was going on in her brain than the battery of expensive tests she underwent. Her treatment cost about a million dollars. At its best, Cahalan's prose carries a sharp, unsparing, tabloid punch in the tradition of Pete Hamill and Jimmy Breslin. But when the acute period of her illness passes and she chronicles the slow process of her recovery, the writing falls flat. Here was the chance to make good on her ambition to inquire into the "deepest part of the self - personality, memory, identity - in an attempt to pick up and understand the pieces left behind." Instead, Cahalan is locked in the dull passage of those weeks, dutifully informing us of her 15-minute walks, her decision to take spin class, her forays out to family gatherings and parties. Finally, and bravely, she crawls back to her old vivacious self. "However, when I look at photographs taken of me 'post,' versus pictures of me 'pre,' there is something altered, something lost - or gained, I can't tell - when I look into my eyes." Michael Greenberg is the author of "Hurry Down Sunshine" and "Beg, Borrow, Steal: A Writer's Life."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 23, 2012]

Brain on Fire PREFACE At first, there's just darkness and silence. "Are my eyes open? Hello?" I can't tell if I'm moving my mouth or if there's even anyone to ask. It's too dark to see. I blink once, twice, three times. There is a dull foreboding in the pit of my stomach. That, I recognize. My thoughts translate only slowly into language, as if emerging from a pot of molasses. Word by word the questions come: Where am I? Why does my scalp itch? Where is everyone? Then the world around me comes gradually into view, beginning as a pinhole, its diameter steadily expanding. Objects emerge from the murk and sharpen into focus. After a moment I recognize them: TV, curtain, bed. I know immediately that I need to get out of here. I lurch forward, but something snaps against me. My fingers find a thick mesh vest at my waist holding me to the bed like a--what's the word?--straitjacket. The vest connects to two cold metal side rails. I wrap my hands around the rails and pull up, but again the straps dig into my chest, yielding only a few inches. There's an unopened window to my right that looks onto a street. Cars, yellow cars. Taxis. I am in New York. Home. Before the relief finishes washing over me, though, I see her. The purple lady. She is staring at me. "Help!" I shout. Her expression never changes, as if I hadn't said a thing. I shove myself against the straps again. "Don't you go doing that," she croons in a familiar Jamaican accent. "Sybil?" But it couldn't be. Sybil was my childhood babysitter. I haven't seen her since I was a child. Why would she choose today to reenter my life? "Sybil? Where am I?" "The hospital. You better calm down." It's not Sybil. "It hurts." The purple lady moves closer, her breasts brushing against my face as she bends across me to unhook the restraints, starting on the right and moving to the left. With my arms free, I instinctually raise my right hand to scratch my head. But instead of hair and scalp, I find a cotton hat. I rip it off, suddenly angry, and raise both hands to inspect my head further. I feel rows and rows of plastic wires. I pluck one out--which makes my scalp sting--and lower it to eye level; it's pink. On my wrist is an orange plastic band. I squint, unable to focus on the words, but after a few seconds, the block letters sharpen: FLIGHT RISK. Excerpted from Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.