when andrew herring, a brown university student and varsity squash player, came down with a case of mono, caused by the epstein-barr virus, he thought nothing of it. he felt completely healthy one day, and the next day he was just a little under the weather. he had some symptoms, such as tiredness, but they weren’t severe.
“it’s the everybody virus, you know?” he said, when discussing how non-serious he thought his illness was.
but then things took a dark turn, and quickly. andrew turned completely yellow. his liver was failing. and then he slipped into a coma, all in a matter of days.
“it happened incredibly quickly,” said andrew, a toronto native. “i went into an eight-day coma, and really, it’s so traumatic on the brain that when i arrived, really all i can remember is going to the hospital and then waking up from my coma post-surgery.”
it’s not typical for the epstein-barr virus to cause liver failure, but in some cases, it can attack the body’s ribonucleic acid, necessary for cell function, and make more virus particles. the immune system tries to defend against the virus, but in the process, destroys liver cells so quickly that it cannot function.
he spent just over a week at toronto general hospital, and in that time, his illness got so severe that his name shot to the top of the donor list for a new liver, making him canada’s number 1 liver transplant recipient. he received one while he was in a coma, and when he woke up, he did so to a new scar and a new future, and no recollection of what had happened.