Couple from Germany left paralysed after eating canned beans
Married couple left paralysed for five months in intensive care after eating green beans from a can.
In a shocking incident a German couple, caught botulism from 'poisoned beans' and became paralyzed for 5 months.
Thankfully, their son escaped his parents' horrific ordeal after he refused to eat the green beans because they did not smell right to him.
Doctors near Leipzig - 118 miles (160km) south of Berlin - went public with the case to raise awareness of the rare toxin.
Reported in the Journal of Medical Case Reports, the article also revealed that just 10 cases of botulism are recorded in Germany each year.
The same lethal neurotoxin is used in cosmetic Botox injections - but in much smaller doses to paralyse muscles in the face.
The 47-year-old woman suffered dizziness, double vision, drooping eyelids and struggled to speak when she went to hospital.
CT and MRI scans found nothing and in the meantime the anonymous woman's neurological symptoms worsened.
Soon, the mum was paralysed from the neck down.
Doctors at Universitätsklinikum Halle hooked her up to a life-support machine after her lungs began to fail.
Her 51-year-old husband too was presented to the same hospital with similar symptoms a day later.
However, he was able to walk normally because he had consumed a 'smaller amount' of the home-canned green beans.
Botulism was suspected when their unidentified son remembered his parents had eaten home-canned beans two days before.
Blood tests for the woman revealed the presence of botulinum toxin. Tests were inconclusive for the man.
Doctors did not administer an antitoxin because more than 72 hours had passed since the ingestion of the 'probably poisoned beans'.
Within three days the man went onto develop quadriparesis - muscle weakness in all four limbs and was placed on mechanical ventilation.
His wife was weaned from life-saving mechanical ventilation after five-and-a-half months. Doctors discharged her after 11 months.
However, her husband was able to breathe on his own a month sooner - and was allowed to return home after just eight months.