Fiona Phillips makes very rare appearance amid Alzheimer’s battle after husband opened up on devastating condition

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FIONA Phillips has made a rare public appearance after being diagnosed with Alzheimer's.

The popular TV star, 64, appeared in a brief Instagram video shared by her husband Martin Frizell, 66, to thank fans for reading their new book, Remember When.

Fiona Phillips holding an ice cream bar.
instagram/@martinfrizell1
Fiona Phillips thanks fans for reading her new book[/caption]
Fiona Phillips holding an ice cream bar outdoors.
instagram/@martinfrizell1
She is rarely seen in public after her Alzheimer's diagnosis[/caption]

Looking in good spirits as she ate an ice cream in a London park, Fiona said: "Hello, thank you for reading my book. It's really good of you. Hope you like it. OK. Bye."

Davina McCall commented: "Oh Fiona!!! So great to see your face ! We've missed you !e and Michael and sending you huge love !!!"

Anna Williamson said: "Sending Fiona so much love. She really looked out for me in my GMTV days, my telly mum and I will never forget how she comforted me when I was going through a tough time in my relationship."

Trisha Goddard wrote: "Sending you lots of love, Fiona. You were so kind to me when you came up to my house in Norfolk to do my first interview after I was diagnosed with breast cancer back in 2008. More than just a colleague… A truly kind, talented and beautiful person!"

Fiona was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's in 2022 and her condition has deteriorated since.

In her new book, Martin heartbreakingly reveals how she failed to recognise her eldest son Nat, 24.

He told how Fiona became distressed when she asked 'who the man was in the kitchen'.

In an extract published in The Mirror, Martin wrote: "One weekend, Nat was home from the Army and making tea in the kitchen while Fiona and I sat watching television."

He added: "She became terribly distressed. 'Who's that man in the kitchen?' she asked me. 'That's Nat', I said gently. 'Our son. He's home for the weekend'."

Martin went on: "She was in such a state that she didn't even seem upset that she had asked the question."

He then said that Nat would have been "devastated" to hear his mother was unable to recognise him.

Last week, former This Morning editor Martin returned to the show to discuss the book, but Fiona wasn't well enough to join him.

He told hosts Alison Hammond and Dermot O'Leary: "She's got bad depression because she wants to work, she's not well enough today to come and talk to you."

Angry over the lack of coverage given to the condition, which is the biggest killer in the UK, Martin's initial plan to write a few paragraphs soon became 24,000 words.

He said: "It started off when we knew it was Alzheimer's. It was to give her a purpose, to give her something to do. This is a bubbly smart, fearless woman, very modern woman and all of a sudden it stops.

"I just get very angry no one talks about it. We become invisible with Alzheimer's, no one wants to talk about it."

Opening up about Fiona's current condition, Martin said: "She's got anxiety, she's got a secondary problem that causes her to be in a lot of pain, which adds to the confusion."

Tragically, he told how Fiona thought he had kidnapped her just weeks ago as they posed for a photograph outside he family home.

Martin said she suffers from delusions, though does still recognise him, even if she isn't aware of their marital status.

n a candid moment of self-reflection, Martin admitted he wasn't Mother Teresa and was prone to getting frustrated, which sometimes leads to arguments.

He accepted some of his work is provocative as he said: "I wish she got cancer, at least there would have been some hope. It's not a sexy disease, the pictures aren't great, on your deathbed you look bloody awful."

Fiona, whose late mum and dad both had Alzheimer's, left GMTV in December 2008 to spend more time with her family. 

She took on small jobs such as a stint on Strictly Come Dancing in 2005 and presenting a Channel 4 documentary titled Mum, Dad, Alzheimer's And Me in 2009. 

But Fiona admitted she never felt "completely right" and became "disconnected" from her family.

She was also starting to struggle with mood swings, erratic behaviour and an inability to complete everyday tasks, such as going to the bank. 

Things came to a head with Martin in 2021 and he moved out of the family home, accusing her of "zoning out" of their marriage

After three weeks apart, the couple met at a hotel and agreed they wanted to stay together — but that things had to change. 

Fiona had initially suspected the exhaustion, anxiety and brain fog she had been battling was a side-effect of Long Covid. She contracted the virus in 2020. 

But by then, Fiona was wondering if her symptoms were down to menopause

Martin urged her to talk to telly doctor Dr Louise Newson, who specialised in the menopause and recommended a course of hormone replacement therapy.

But after several months of seeing little change, Dr Newson recommended she be properly assessed. 

In 2022, a consultant broke the heartbreaking news to the couple that Fiona, then 61, had early onset Alzheimer's. 

Fiona Phillips at the NatWest Everywomen Awards.
Getty
Fiona Phillips was distressed after she failed to recognise her own son[/caption]
Martin Frizzell and Fiona Phillips at a charity event.
Getty
Martin write about his wife's Alzheimer's battle in her new book[/caption]

Other major Alzheimer's breakthroughs

While experts have warned that dementia diagnoses in England have reached record numbers, there have been a number of recent advances against brain robbing diseases.

From "game-changing" drugs gaining approval to blood tests that can spot the condition years before symptoms, here are other major Alzheimer's breakthroughs.

  • A "game-changing" Alzheimer's drug called donanemab, that slows mental decline by up to 60 per cent has been approved in the United States. A UK decision on whether the drug will become available to patients in the UK with early symptoms is expected imminently.
  • A blood test that detects Alzheimer's up to 15 years before symptoms emerge is set to be made free on the NHS within a year. The new test is cheaper, easier and at least as accurate as the current diagnosis options and works by measuring levels of a protein in the blood called p-tau217.
  • Researchers have developed a first-of-its-kind test that could predict dementia up to nine years before a diagnosis, with 80 per cent accuracy. It involves analysing network of connections in the brain when it's in "idle mode" to look for very early signs of the condition.
  • A woman who has evaded Alzheimer's disease despite half her relatives getting it could hold the clues to how to prevent it, with scientists pinpointing a particular gene which they think could help prevent Alzheimer's from progressing. 

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