It took seven years to solve riddle of rare condition that made Ellie a social outcast: Company director has disorder that leaves her smelling of fish


  • Ellie James contracted trimethylaminuria, ‘fish-odour syndrome’, aged 30
  • Condition caused by missing enzyme, gives sweat and breath strong smell
  • Bathed up to 5 times a day, used kitchen detergent in wild bid to clean
  • Given soap in office secret Santa, body spray secretly posted through door
  • Referred to hormone specialist after forcing GP to take syndrome seriously

By
Rebecca Evans

17:30 EST, 6 April 2014

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17:31 EST, 6 April 2014

Taunts and ridicule: Ellie James, 44, was 30 when her sweat, breath and urine started to smell of fish

For 14 years, Ellie James has been blighted by an incredibly rare and embarrassing genetic disorder.

The company director, 44, is one of only a handful of people with a condition that leaves her smelling of fish or rotten eggs.

But it took seven years to finally diagnose her after doctors dismissed her concerns – and even gave her humiliating lectures on personal hygiene and how to wash properly.

The disorder, known as trimethylaminuria, or fish-odour syndrome, has had a devastating impact on her life since it developed when she was 30.

Dubbed ‘smelly Ellie’ by bullies, she has been taunted and ridiculed by strangers. She is the butt of office jokes – receiving soap or perfume as secret Santa presents – and has even had bottles of body spray posted anonymously through her letter box.

Miss James, from Abingdon, Oxfordshire, said: ‘At first I didn’t understand what was wrong. I’d always had impeccable hygiene. The smell was a complete mystery – I wondered if my cat had brought in a mouse and left it to rot.

‘But I slowly realised it was me when strangers began to stare at me while holding their noses. I heard people whispering about me in the office.

‘I would come home from work every night and cry. Soon people were showering me with gifts of perfume. At Christmas I’d get soap – it was completely humiliating.

‘Once a driver actually installed an air freshener on the bus I use, and a passenger said it was my fault. It was soul-destroying – it was a real struggle getting out of bed in the morning.’

At one point Miss James was having a bath five times a day. And in desperation she resorted to scrubbing her skin with kitchen detergent until it was red raw.

Teased: Her workmates would give Ellie soap and perfume as presents in the office secret Santa as a joke

‘I was at my wits’ end,’ she told the Sunday Mirror.

The condition is caused by an enzyme missing which causes a strong odour in sweat, urine and breath – usually described as like rotting fish, faeces or rubbish.

It is created when the body is unable to break down the smelly chemical trimethylamine that is produced in the gut when certain foods, such as dairy, coffee, meat and fish, are digested, and there is currently no cure.

After suffering with the condition for five years, Miss James plucked up the courage to visit her GP in 2005, but she was left feeling humiliated after being lectured on personal hygiene.

As a result, she did not return to see her doctor until a year later, when she was finally taken seriously.

Treatment: Finally, after persuading her GP to reassess her condition, she was referred to a hormone specialist who put her on an intense programme of antibiotics and a unique diet, which has calmed her symptoms

Tests were carried out and she was eventually diagnosed in 2007. She said: ‘Although it was hard to swallow, I felt relief.’

Miss James was referred to an endocrinologist – an expert on hormones – who put her on antibiotics and a diet plan. She said: ‘I began to wash with a pH-balanced soap after I found out that washing excessively with normal soap made the smell even worse. There is no cure but making these changes helps.’

She added: ‘Now, when someone holds their nose, I take them aside and explain that I have a medical condition. I hope my story will help educate those who point fingers, and encourage other sufferers to find the strength to get help.’

Miss James’s partner, Dan Molston, 50, said: ‘Ellie is a lovely person and that’s all that matters.’

Comments (1)

what you think

The comments below have been moderated in advance.

murasaki,

downers grove, United States,

3 hours ago

I suppose if you didn’t consume dairy, coffee, meat and fish that that would help a lot

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