James Saunders
Guest Reporter
A Kent father spent three weeks in hospital after being bitten by what he believes was a false widow spider while sleeping in his bed.
Brian Smith, 43, from Maidstone, suffered severe swelling as venom spread through his body, causing his limbs to balloon dangerously.
Four months after the incident, the scaffolder is still experiencing health complications including arthritis and mobility issues.
Doctors told the father-of-three his hand could have "exploded" due to the extreme swelling caused by the spider's venom.
Smith recalled waking up to "a really sharp pain" on his right hand during the night.
"It woke me up. It felt like someone was putting a fag out in my hand," he said.
He initially dismissed it and went back to sleep, thinking he was dreaming.
But the next morning, he struggled to move his hand - and noticed two small fang marks.
"I thought I might've slept on it funny but then it started swelling through the day," Smith explained.
As his condition worsened, Brian was rushed to Maidstone Hospital by ambulance.
Medical staff informed him that his hand had only 20 per cent capacity left to swell before it would "explode like a balloon."
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"The skin was going to explode due to the pressure, so I would've needed a skin graft. Thank god I didn't lose my hand," he said.
Then, the venom spread further.
"The poison went down my arm, down the back of my shoulders and went down into my left leg. My leg ballooned," Smith explained.
"I couldn't walk because my leg ballooned so much. I was on crutches for three weeks. I still have a little limp now.
"My immune system started attacking different parts of my body and I've now got reactive arthritis because of it and I'm on steroids for three months.
"My little finger on my right hand won't flatten properly and I still get a dull, constant ache."
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Following his ordeal, Brian now takes extra precautions in his bedroom.
"When I was in hospital, my parents fumigated my bedroom and tried looking for the spider but they couldn't find it," he said.
"I was quite shocked a spider in the UK could cause this sort of damage. I thought this only happened in Australia and places like that."
The false widow is Britain's only native species of venomous spider - and now, Smith has urged others to stay vigilant.
"Now I always check my bed sheets. I'd tell other people to be very wary of them because they can do a lot of damage," he said.
"I'm slowly getting better but I'm still not 100 per cent."
Find Out More...
Brian Smith, 43, from Maidstone, suffered severe swelling as venom spread through his body, causing his limbs to balloon dangerously.
Four months after the incident, the scaffolder is still experiencing health complications including arthritis and mobility issues.
Doctors told the father-of-three his hand could have "exploded" due to the extreme swelling caused by the spider's venom.
Smith recalled waking up to "a really sharp pain" on his right hand during the night.

"It woke me up. It felt like someone was putting a fag out in my hand," he said.
He initially dismissed it and went back to sleep, thinking he was dreaming.
But the next morning, he struggled to move his hand - and noticed two small fang marks.
"I thought I might've slept on it funny but then it started swelling through the day," Smith explained.
As his condition worsened, Brian was rushed to Maidstone Hospital by ambulance.
Medical staff informed him that his hand had only 20 per cent capacity left to swell before it would "explode like a balloon."
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"The skin was going to explode due to the pressure, so I would've needed a skin graft. Thank god I didn't lose my hand," he said.
Then, the venom spread further.
"The poison went down my arm, down the back of my shoulders and went down into my left leg. My leg ballooned," Smith explained.
"I couldn't walk because my leg ballooned so much. I was on crutches for three weeks. I still have a little limp now.
"My immune system started attacking different parts of my body and I've now got reactive arthritis because of it and I'm on steroids for three months.
"My little finger on my right hand won't flatten properly and I still get a dull, constant ache."
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Following his ordeal, Brian now takes extra precautions in his bedroom.
"When I was in hospital, my parents fumigated my bedroom and tried looking for the spider but they couldn't find it," he said.
"I was quite shocked a spider in the UK could cause this sort of damage. I thought this only happened in Australia and places like that."
The false widow is Britain's only native species of venomous spider - and now, Smith has urged others to stay vigilant.
"Now I always check my bed sheets. I'd tell other people to be very wary of them because they can do a lot of damage," he said.
"I'm slowly getting better but I'm still not 100 per cent."
Find Out More...