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'Rare' Flesh-Eating Bacteria Strikes for the Fifth Time (VIDEO)

by Jacqueline Burt on June 4, 2012 at 1:29 PM

flesh-eating victimI'm not sure I like where this whole flesh-eating trend is going. If it's not zombies, it's bacteria: Louise Thompson of South Carolina is officially the fifth person to be diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis in the weeks since 24-year-old Aimee Copeland of Georgia contracted the disease ziplining on a river with friends.

The grandmother doesn't know how she got the infection, but says it started about two months as a pain that felt like "needles against her skin."

By the time she went for surgery, doctors were forced to remove a "football-sized" area of her leg. She was in a coma for five days, but finally stood up for the first time last week and hopes to walk eventually, she says.

So that's good news, at least. But you kind of have to wonder ... who's next? Because even though doctors continue to insist that cases like these are incredibly rare, I feel like the five recent victims would disagree.

And I'm not buying that the cases aren't related in some way, given the fact that each of the patients live in the same general geographic location: Aimee Copeland, Bobby Vaughn, and Paul Bales in Georgia, and Louise Thompson and new mom Lana Kuykendall in South Carolina.

What gives? There's clearly something going on here, even if nobody's sure exactly what it is yet. Diagnoses of 'rare' diseases don't suddenly surge for no reason at all.

Here's hoping we get some answers soon.

Why do you think more people are suddenly being diagnosed with flesh-eating bacteria?


Image via FOX Carolina

Filed Under: illness, general health

Comments

9
  • Momma...
    --

    Momma_Charisma

    June 4, 2012 at 3:10 PM
    Wrong....this is 6th....my fiance has been in the hsopital for 2 weeks now due to having it.......we almjost lost him
  • Jenni...
    -- Facebook comment from

    Jennifer Jones-Wismann

    June 4, 2012 at 4:56 PM

    oh no, i'm sorry momma Charisma. That is horrible, and very very scary. I wonder how it started and who brought it and spread it?


  • fghjk
    -- Nonmember comment from

    fghjk

    June 4, 2012 at 5:03 PM
    Wow that really sucks. Hope your hubby gets better and anyone gets infected. Jennifer no one brought it or no one is spreading it. Its just a bacteria no different than ecoli or other bacteria. Some bacteria might be more active depending on a region, temperature or sanitation. There is nothing we can do about bacteria but hope we dont fall pray to it and take precaution.
  • Momma...
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    Momma_Charisma

    June 4, 2012 at 6:06 PM
    Its basically ben explained to me as the same bacteria as strep basically my fiance is a diabetic and wasnt doing all he could to take care olf his diabetes so he was much more easily effected. Hes going to be in the hospital for months due to this....its been hard....i feel for anyone whos dealt with this or been there to support someone with this....its so damn hard
  • Momma...
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    Momma_Charisma

    June 4, 2012 at 6:12 PM
    Sorry that was horrible cluster of bad spelling we just got more bad news and im crying
  • B
    -- Nonmember comment from

    B

    June 5, 2012 at 7:58 AM
    Fifth time? Really believe that? There have been 6 cases at the hospital I work at just in the past month.
  • Lance...
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    LancesMom

    June 5, 2012 at 12:24 PM
  • Mocha...
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    MochaCocoaBean

    June 5, 2012 at 2:43 PM

    "Rare" diseases are classified as diseases that effect less than 1 in 200,000. Given there are 300+ million people in the US, it is quite possible for this to occur more frequently than we think. It is just getting media attention now because of the publicity of Aimee Copeland, now it is "news-worthy" to report about. Otherwise, this story probably wouldn't even be a blip on the radar. 


  • Tonya...
    -- Facebook comment from

    Tonya Putnam

    June 6, 2012 at 3:33 PM

    I have a friend whose teenage son dealt with NF this time last year.  He got a small scrape from sliding during baseball and almost lost his leg because of it.  I think that the reason we are hearing about so many cases all of a sudden is because people are becoming more aware of the condition and doctors are starting to know what to look for.


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