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Student, Ellen Mercer, 24, died after using ‘two to three bottles’ of laughing gas a day

A student who may have been killed by laughing gas was inhaling up to three bottles of the drug each day, an inquest heard. Ellen Mercer, 24...



A student who may have been killed by laughing gas was inhaling up to three bottles of the drug each day, an inquest heard.

Ellen Mercer, 24, was taken to hospital in February last year after she reported she was unable to walk, Berkshire coroner’s court heard.

She was treated by medical staff at Wexham Park Hospital Emergency Department, but she died 24 hours later.

Senior coroner Heidi Connor told the inquest part of her cause of death related to nitrous oxide gas, also known as laughing gas.

A post-mortem report found Ms Mercer’s death to have been caused by bilateral pulmonary thromboembolism, deep vein thrombosis, and ‘long-term complications of nitrous oxide use’.

Michaela Kirtley, an emergency medical technician, attended Ms Mercer’s home the day before she reported being unable to walk.

When she arrived at the scene, she was shown to the bedroom by Ms Mercer’s boyfriend.

‘I took notice of the room,’ she said.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 30: Cans of nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, lay in the gutter of a central London road on January 30, 2023 in London, England. The UK government is considering a ban on the sale of laughing gas in England and Wales amid concerns over damaging side effects and as part of a drive to tackle anti-social behaviour. Nitrous oxide is believed to be one of the most commonly used drugs among 16-24 year olds in England. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)
Ms Mercer was inhaling ‘up to three big bottles a day’ (Picture: Carl Court/Getty Images) (File image)

‘There were no sheets on the bed at all. There was just the duvet, severely stained. The room was bare.’

She said the scene made it clear to her that she was dealing with a ‘vulnerable person’.


She said Ms Mercer ‘was talking as normal’, and the only one of her vital signs that was outside the normal range was her heart rate, which could have been due to anxiety.


Ms Mercer told her that she had burned her legs after spilling a gas canister on them and that she had been unable to walk or go to the toilet for two weeks, she said.


She said the 24-year-old looked six months pregnant.


She checked the wounds on Ms Mercer’s legs, which she described as ‘pussy’.


Ms Mercer’s boyfriend showed her a box of gas canisters, which she identified as nitrous oxide.


‘I had never seen such big bottles,’ she said.


She told the inquest that the canisters were 600g and that Ms Mercer’s boyfriend said she took ‘two to three bottles’ per day, but had slowed down in the last couple of weeks.


Ms Mercer told her she had passed out and the bottle had fallen on her legs.


An ambulance then took Ms Mercer to hospital.


At the time of the student’s death, possession of laughing gas with the intent of getting high was not illegal. It was banned by the Government, and made a Class C drug, in November 2023.


The inquest continues.



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