3 days agoShareSavePhilippa GoymerBBC North East InvestigationsShareSaveBBCIn recent weeks, 28 people in the north-east of England have been left with potentially fatal botulism after having anti-wrinkle injections believed to have been fake. Such reactions are usually so rare hospitals stock very little anti-toxin and they were in danger of running out. On one night in June, five people were in an accident and emergency department (A&E) in Durham suffering from serious adverse effects of anti-wrinkle injections – Nicola Fairley was one of them.Within days of having what she was told was a Botox jab, but which turned out to be an illegal copy, her throat began closing up, an eye swelled shut and one side of her face started to droop. She could not smile, struggled to eat and swallow, felt exhausted and was desperate to sleep.The 37-year-old mother of four from Bishop Auckland in County Durham told staff she had been given injections and was unwell.”They got the doctor to see me within five minutes and started some tests there and then,” Mrs Fairley recalls.Of the 28 people, mostly in the Durham and Darlington areas, who have found themselves in a similar position, four others ended up in the same hospital on the same night as Mrs Fairley.In an average year, the University Hospital of North Durham usually sees no cases at all of botulism that require treatment. Only six were recorded in the whole of England in 2023-24.Since being approached by the BBC the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has set up an investigation.Nicola FairleyBotulinum toxin is widely used to reduce facial wrinkles and treat muscle conditions. While cosmetic practitioners do not need to be licensed, the drug does. Only seven brands are licensed in the UK, with Botox the most well known.When used correctly the amounts are small and side effects are rare. But unregulated toxin, or larger quantities, can attack the nerves and cause botulism, a potentially life-threatening condition that causes paralysis. Mrs Fairley had anti-wrinkle injections before, paying £100 for three areas, but then won a round of treatment from the same provider in a competition. She was told it was a stronger type of the toxin and again had three areas injected.She says she had no idea this treatment was illegal.Within two hours her forehead was “frozen”, although genuine cosmetic injections should take several days to start working with the full effect visible after two weeks. Of those in A&E at the same time, some had used the same practitioner as Mrs Fairley. They were all diagnosed with botulism and one doctor told the group they had never seen that many people with the condition at the same time.It is so rare, hospitals do not typically keep large quantities of the anti-toxin – made from horse blood – that is used to stop the toxin spreading further.Nicola FairleyNorth Durham was already trying to source anti-toxin drugs from other hospitals as there had been a spate of cases in the days before Mrs Fairley and the others arrived in A&E.In an internal communication seen by the BBC, a hospital leader said: “We’ve just about exhausted all stock of the antitoxin from local holders (Newcastle, Carlisle and Leeds) and have 10 more coming from London.” They were “bracing” themselves for more patients.The MHRA told the BBC it was investigating allegations surrounding the illegal sale and supply of fake “Botox-type” products in the North East. Chief safety officer Dr Alison Cave said the body’s criminal enforcement unit “works hard to identify those …