It was a fairly close environment being on a truck or a bus together, so there were social activities all the time
sometimes she was fully engaged and involved with everybody and other times she was completely withdrawn, complaining of headaches and that sort of thing, he said.
The worse thing of that withdrawal attitude or manifestation was, we were at a town in Potosi
Allison could not get out of bed
and she was just couldnt get out of bed, just completely, not unresponsive, it wasnt as though she was comatose, but she was curled up in bed and didnt want to go anywhere.
I said we should call the doctor and she said `no, she didnt feel sick
I just dont want to go out today.
Baden-Clay said hed never seen his wife like that before.
The next day she woke up normal more or less, as though nothing happened and I was delighted but also confused as to why that was, he said.
That sort of mood fluctuation continued throughout the trip.
He said they stayed with friends in Quito and there was a day when his wife seemed well and a day when she did not.
Baden-Clay said his wife didnt seem to know why she was feeling the way she was.
He said they went to the Galapagos Islands and his wife became very anxious again.
She was just not great at certain times, at other times, she was fine, he said.
Baden-Clay said they went to New York, then back to England where Ms Baden-Clay crashed.
We took her to (a) hospital
and that was the first time we became aware of the possibility of the Lariam being a trigger for the episodes Allison had been having, he said.
http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...-allison-in-2012/story-fnihsrf2-1226966924597