
A wife allegedly murdered by her husband suffered a lack of oxygen to her brain for up to an hour before her death, an expert told his trial.
Ian Stewart 61, is accused of killing Diane Stewart, 47, at their home in Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire in 2010.
Her cause of death was recorded at the time as Sudden Unexplained Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP).
A history of recent seizure is a risk factor for SUDEP but often they havenât had a seizure for many, many years
Dr Kieren Allinson
Police investigated the case after a jury found Stewart guilty in 2017 of murdering childrenâs author Helen Bailey the year before.
Professor Safa Al-Sarraj, a consultant neuropathologist, was asked to examine preserved parts of Mrs Stewartâs brain.
The trial, at Huntingdon Crown Court, was earlier told that, while most of Mrs Stewartâs remains were cremated, she had donated her brain to medical science.
Prof Al-Sarraj said he observed âchanges in the brain⦠consistent with early ischemiaâ.
He defined ischemia as âdamage to the cells due to lack of oxygen and blood supplyâ.
He said he estimated the damage happened over 35 minutes to an hour but conceded he was a âbit reluctantâ to give figures âas they are all estimatesâ.
People die suddenly and unexpectedly of (epilepsy)
Dr Allinson
Prosecutor Stuart Trimmer QC asked Prof Al-Sarraj: â(With a) healthy breathing human you donât expect to find any evidence of ischemia, do you?âProf Al-Sarraj said: âNo.â
He said ischemia may be found in cases where a person dies after suffering from ârestrictedâ breathing for â30 minutes plusâ, but said: âYou may have look carefully for it.â
Amjad Malik QC, defending, said: âSUDEP is possible as the cause of death for Diane Stewart, isnât it?â
Prof Al-Sarraj replied: âI agree. Yes, itâs one of the things you have to consider â but itâs not the only cause of death you had to consider.â
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A second expert witness, consultant neuropathologist Dr Kieren Allinson, said there was âno positive evidence of a recent seizureâ, such as tongue biting.
He described epilepsy as âawfulâ and said âpeople die suddenly and unexpectedly of the diseaseâ.
Dr Allinson agreed with Mr Malik that the absence of evidence of a recent seizure âdoesnât make it unlikely that SUDEP occurredâ.
He said: âA history of recent seizure is a risk factor for SUDEP but often they havenât had a seizure for many, many years.â
Consultant neurologist Christopher Derry said he estimated that the risk of Mrs Stewart having a fatal epileptic seizure was about one in 100,000.
He said he âcannot exclude it⦠but it seems she was at very low risk of it occurringâ.
He noted that she was taking medication for her epilepsy.
Stewart denies the murder of his wife.
The trial continues.