Tag Archives: bacterial

Japan’s tissue-damaging bacterial disease: What you need to know – The Japan Times

  1. Japan’s tissue-damaging bacterial disease: What you need to know The Japan Times
  2. Commentary: What you need to know about the deadly strep infections spreading across Japan CNA
  3. Opinion | A Tornado Ripping Through the Body: Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome Medpage Today
  4. ‘Flesh-eating’ bacterium no cause for alarm, Japan tells world | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis 朝日新聞デジタル
  5. No ‘Flesh-Eating’ disease reported in Thailand so far this year – DDC Pattaya Mail

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Madonna believes she spoke to God during ‘near-death’ hospitalization for ‘serious bacterial infection’ – Fox News

  1. Madonna believes she spoke to God during ‘near-death’ hospitalization for ‘serious bacterial infection’ Fox News
  2. Madonna struggled walking to her yard after ‘near-death’ infection Entertainment Weekly News
  3. Madonna Reveals First Word She Said After Waking Up from Coma PEOPLE
  4. Madonna Reveals the First Words She Spoke After Her ‘Near-Death Experience’ in ICU Rolling Stone
  5. Madonna Opens Up About Near-Death Experience in L.A. Concert: ‘God Was Saying, “You Wanna Come With Me?” And I Said, “No!”‘ Variety

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Public health officials dispel claims that San Jose woman caught flesh-eating bacterial infection from fish, leading to quadruple amputation – The Mercury News

  1. Public health officials dispel claims that San Jose woman caught flesh-eating bacterial infection from fish, leading to quadruple amputation The Mercury News
  2. California mother’s limbs amputated after flesh-eating bacteria infection linked to fish: Report USA TODAY
  3. Vibriosis: What Canadians should know about raw seafood as U.S. mom loses all limbs Yahoo Canada Shine On
  4. Bay Area woman has all limbs amputated from bacterial infection possibly linked to undercooked fish The Santa Rosa Press Democrat
  5. US woman loses limbs after eating undercooked fish; all about this infection Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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CDC says an eye drop brand may be connected to drug-resistant bacterial infections

A brand of over-the-counter eye drops may be linked to a bacterial infection that left one person dead and three others with permanent vision loss, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC has identified at least 50 people in 11 states with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is a type of bacterium resistant to most antibiotics. So far, there have been cases in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Nevada, Texas, Utah and Washington.

The agency said it is investigating, and that a majority of people affected reported using preservative-free EzriCare Artificial Tears before they became infected, according to a Jan. 20 statement.

Among the reported cases, 11 people developed eye infections, including at least three who were blinded in one eye. Others who became ill had respiratory infections or urinary tract infections, and one person died after the bacterium entered their bloodstream.

YEARLY COVID VACCINE AS PROPOSED BY FDA? ‘CART BEFORE THE HORSE,’ SAYS DOCTOR 

A brand of over-the-counter eyedrops may be linked to a bacterial infection that left one person dead and three others with permanent vision loss, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
(iStock)

It remains unclear at this time if those affected had underlying eye conditions, such as glaucoma or cataracts, that would have made them more susceptible. Eye infection symptoms include pain, swelling, discharge, redness, blurry vision, sensitivity to light and the feeling that an object is stuck in the eye.

Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria are commonly found in water, soil and on the hands of otherwise healthy people. These infections typically take place in hospitals among people with weakened immune systems. This type of bacterium is often resistant to standard antibiotics.

The CDC has identified at least 50 people in 11 states with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is a type of bacterium resistant to most antibiotics.
(iStock)

The eye drops in question are labeled as preservative-free, meaning the product does not contain anything that could prevent microbiological growth. 

It is possible that the drops were contaminated during the manufacturing process or when a person with the bacteria on their skin opened the container.

The CDC discovered the bacteria in the eye drop bottles and is conducting tests to determine whether that bacteria matches the strain found in patients.

RON DESANTIS PUSHES FOR SWEEPING PROTECTIONS AGAINST COVID-19 MANDATES IN FLORIDA

Eye infection symptoms include pain, swelling, discharge, redness, blurry vision, sensitivity to light and the feeling that an object is stuck in the eye.
(iStock)

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EzriCare Artificial Tears had not been recalled as of Tuesday evening. 

The CDC is recommending that clinicians and patients stop using the product until the investigation and laboratory analysis are complete.

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New bacterial therapy approach to treat lung cancer

Fluorescence microscopy image of lung cancer cells stained with antibodies against proteins involved in cellular growth. Credit: Dhruba Deb/Columbia Engineering

Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer in the United States and around the world. Many of the currently available therapies have been ineffective, leaving patients with very few options. A promising new strategy to treat cancer has been bacterial therapy, but while this treatment modality has quickly progressed from laboratory experiments to clinical trials in the last five years, the most effective treatment for certain types of cancers may be in combination with other drugs.

Columbia Engineering researchers report that they have developed a preclinical evaluation pipeline for characterization of bacterial therapies in lung cancer models. Their new study, published December 13, 2022, by Scientific Reports, combines bacterial therapies with other modalities of treatment to improve treatment efficacy without any additional toxicity. This new approach was able to rapidly characterize bacterial therapies and successfully integrate them with current targeted therapies for lung cancer.

“We envision a fast and selective expansion of our pipeline to improve treatment efficacy and safety for solid tumors,” said first author Dhruba Deb, an associate research scientist who studies the effect of bacterial toxins on lung cancer in Professor Tal Danino’s lab in Biomedical Engineering, “As someone who has lost loved ones to cancer, I would like to see this strategy move from the bench to bedside in the future.”

The team used RNA sequencing to discover how cancer cells were responding to bacteria at the cellular and molecular levels. They built a hypothesis on which molecular pathways of cancer cells were helping the cells to be resistant to the bacteria therapy. To test their hypothesis, the researchers blocked these pathways with current cancer drugs and showed that combining the drugs with bacterial toxins is more effective in eliminating lung cancer cells. They validated the combination of bacteria therapy with an AKT-inhibitor as an example in mouse models of lung cancer.

“This new study describes an exciting drug development pipeline that has been previously unexplored in lung cancer—the use of toxins derived from bacteria,” said Upal Basu Roy, executive director of research, LUNGevity Foundation, U.S.. “The preclinical data presented in the manuscript provides a strong rationale for continued research in this area, thereby opening up the possibility of new treatment options for patients diagnosed with this lethal disease.”

Deb plans to expand his strategy to larger studies in preclinical models of difficult-to-treat lung cancers and collaborate with clinicians to make a push for the clinical translation.

More information:
Dhruba Deb et al, Design of combination therapy for engineered bacterial therapeutics in non-small cell lung cancer, Scientific Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-26105-1
Provided by
Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

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Scientists create world’s first ‘Vagina-on-a-Chip’ to combat bacterial diseases

Studying vaginal health

Best of all, it can be inoculated with different strains of bacteria allowing researchers to study their effects on the organ’s health. 

“The vaginal microbiome plays an important role in regulating vaginal health and disease, and has a major impact on prenatal health. Our human Vagina Chip offers an attractive solution to study host-microbiome interactions and accelerate the development of potential probiotic treatments,” said first author Gautam Mahajan, Ph.D., a former Wyss Institute researcher who now works at Emulate, Inc.

The Vagina on a Chip was developed with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to treat vaginal microbiome disruptions caused by bacterial vaginosis (BV).

The organization hopes to create a biotherapeutic treatment for BV and move it into human clinical trials to decrease its many negative side effects, such as infections of the reproductive tract, prenatal complications, and infant death rates, particularly in low-resource nations.

The new chip will help with vaginal health.

BV is currently treated with antibiotics, but it often recurs and can lead to more serious complications, including pelvic inflammatory disease and even infertility.

“A major stumbling block for that effort was that there were no good preclinical models that could be used to study which therapies can actually treat BV in human tissues. Our team’s project was to create a human Vagina Chip to aid in the development and testing of new therapies for BV,” said co-author Aakanksha Gulati, Ph.D., a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Wyss Institute.

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Princeton Scientists Solve a Bacterial Mystery

The researchers were able to observe bacterial colonies’ clumpy growth in three dimensions. Credit: Neil Adelantar/Princeton University

Researchers found that bacteria colonies form in three dimensions in rough shapes similar to crystals.

Bacterial colonies often grow in streaks on Petri dishes in laboratories, but no one has understood how the colonies arrange themselves in more realistic three-dimensional (3-D) environments, such as tissues and gels in human bodies or soils and sediments in the environment, until now. This knowledge could be important for advancing environmental and medical research.

A Princeton University team has now developed a method for observing bacteria in 3-D environments. They discovered that when the bacteria grow, their colonies consistently form fascinating rough shapes that resemble a branching head of broccoli, far more complex than what is seen in a Petri dish. 

“Ever since bacteria were discovered over 300 years ago, most lab research has studied them in test tubes or on Petri dishes,” said Sujit Datta, an assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering at Princeton and the study’s senior author. This was a result of practical limits rather than a lack of curiosity. “If you try to watch bacteria grow in tissues or in soils, those are opaque, and you can’t actually see what the colony is doing. That has really been the challenge.”

Researchers Sujit Datta, assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering, Alejandro Martinez-Calvo, a postdoctoral researcher, and Anna Hancock, a graduate student in chemical and biological engineering. Credit: David Kelly Crow for Princeton University

Datta’s research group discovered this behavior using a ground-breaking experimental setup that enables them to make previously unheard-of observations of bacterial colonies in their natural, three-dimensional state. Unexpectedly, the scientists discovered that the growth of the wild colonies consistently resembles other natural phenomena like the growth of crystals or the spread of frost on a windowpane.

“These kinds of rough, branchy shapes are ubiquitous in nature, but typically in the context of growing or agglomerating non-living systems,” said Datta. “What we found is that growing in 3-D, bacterial colonies exhibit a very similar process despite the fact that these are collectives of living organisms.”

This new explanation of how bacteria colonies develop in three dimensions was recently published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.  Datta and his colleagues hope that their discoveries will help with a wide range of bacterial growth research, from the creation of more effective antimicrobials to pharmaceutical, medical, and environmental research, as well as procedures that harness bacteria for industrial use.

Princeton researchers in the lab. Credit: David Kelly Crow for Princeton University

“At a fundamental level, we’re excited that this work reveals surprising connections between the development of form and function in biological systems and studies of inanimate growth processes in materials science and statistical physics. But also, we think that this new view of when and where cells are growing in 3D will be of interest to anyone interested in bacterial growth, such as in environmental, industrial, and biomedical applications,” Datta said.

For several years, Datta’s research team has been developing a system that allows them to analyze phenomena that are usually cloaked in opaque settings, such as fluid flowing through soils. The team uses specially designed hydrogels, which are water-absorbent polymers similar to those in jello and contact lenses, as matrices to support bacterial growth in 3-D. Unlike those common versions of hydrogels, Datta’s materials are made up of extremely tiny balls of hydrogel that are easily deformed by the bacteria, allow for the free passage of oxygen and nutrients that support bacterial growth, and are transparent to light.

“It’s like a ball pit where each ball is an individual hydrogel. They’re microscopic, so you can’t really see them,” Datta said. The research team calibrated the hydrogel’s makeup to mimic the structure of soil or tissue. The hydrogel is strong enough to support the growing bacterial colony without presenting enough resistance to constrain the growth.

“As the bacterial colonies grow in the hydrogel matrix, they can easily rearrange the balls around them so they are not trapped,” he said. “It’s like plunging your arm into the ball pit. If you drag it through, the balls rearrange themselves around your arm.”

The researchers performed experiments with four different species of bacteria (including one that helps to generate kombucha’s tart taste) to see how they grew in three dimensions.

“We changed cell types, nutrient conditions, hydrogel properties,” Datta said. The researchers saw the same, rough-edged growth patterns in each case. “We systematically changed all those parameters, but this appears to be a generic phenomenon.”

Datta said two factors seemed to cause the broccoli-shaped growth on a colony’s surface. First, bacteria with access to high levels of nutrients or oxygen will grow and reproduce faster than ones in a less abundant environment. Even the most uniform environments have some uneven density of nutrients, and these variations cause spots in the colony’s surface to surge ahead or fall behind. Repeated in three dimensions, this causes the bacteria colony to form bumps and nodules as some subgroups of bacteria grow more quickly than their neighbors.

Second, the researchers observed that in three-dimensional growth, only the bacteria close to the colony’s surface grew and divided. The bacteria crammed into the center of the colony seemed to lapse into a dormant state. Because the bacteria on the inside were not growing and dividing, the outer surface was not subjected to pressure that would cause it to expand evenly. Instead, its expansion is primarily driven by growth along the very edge of the colony. And the growth along the edge is subject to nutrient variations that eventually results in bumpy, uneven growth.

“If the growth was uniform, and there was no difference between the bacteria inside the colony and those on the periphery, it would be like filling a balloon, said Alejandro Martinez-Calvo, a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton and the paper’s first author. “The pressure from the inside would fill in any perturbations on the periphery.”

To explain why this pressure was not present, the researchers added a fluorescent tag to proteins that become active in cells when the bacteria grow. The fluorescent protein lights up when bacteria are active and remains dark when they are not. Observing the colonies, the researchers saw that bacteria on the colony’s edge were bright green, while the core remained dark.

“The colony essentially self-organizes into a core and a shell that behave in very different ways,” Datta said.

Datta said the theory is that the bacteria on the colony’s edges scoop up most of the nutrients and oxygen, leaving little for the inside bacteria.

“We think they are going dormant because they are starved,” Datta said, although he cautioned that further research was needed to explore this.

Datta said the experiments and mathematical models used by the researchers found that there was an upper limit to the bumps that formed on the colony surfaces. The bumpy surface is a result of random variations in the oxygen and nutrients in the environment, but the randomness tends to even out within certain limits.

“The roughness has an upper limit of how large it can grow – the floret size if we are comparing it to broccoli,” he said. “We were able to predict that from the math, and it seems to be an inevitable feature of large colonies growing in 3D.”

Because the bacterial growth tended to follow a similar pattern as crystal growth and other well-studied phenomena of inanimate materials, Datta said the researchers were able to adapt standard mathematical models to reflect the bacterial growth. He said future research will likely focus on better understanding the mechanisms behind the growth, the implications of rough growth shapes for colony functioning, and applying these lessons to other areas of interest.

“Ultimately, this work gives us more tools to understand, and eventually control, how bacteria grow in nature,” he said.

Reference: “Morphological instability and roughening of growing 3D bacterial colonies” by Alejandro Martínez-Calvo, Tapomoy Bhattacharjee, R. Kōnane Bay, Hao Nghi Luu, Anna M. Hancock, Ned S. Wingreen and Sujit S. Datta, 18 October 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2208019119

The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the New Jersey Health Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, The Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund, the Pew Biomedical Scholars Fund, and the Human Frontier Science Program.



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CDC warns dental patients of rare bacterial infections via waterlines

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued an emergency response and preparedness health advisory about outbreaks of nontuberculous mycobacteria infections that have happened via dental waterlines.

The alert was issued through the agency’s Health Alert Network. It reminds dental patients and professionals of the importance of sanitation during dental procedures.

Nontuberculous mycobacteria are defined as “opportunistic pathogens [that place] some groups at increased risk, including those with underlying lung disease or depressed immune systems,” according to the CDC.

POPCORN STUCK IN MAN’S TOOTH LEADS TO LIFE-THREATENING INFECTION, OPEN HEART SURGERY

While infections are rare, the CDC noted that there have been multiple documented cases of children contracting nontuberculous mycobacteria after undergoing pulpotomies — a procedure that involves the removal of a tooth’s diseased pulp — according to the American Dental Association.

The documented outbreaks reportedly happened in March 2022. They stem from a pediatric dental clinic where treatment water had high levels of bacteria, according to the CDC.

The city and state where the recent outbreaks occurred were not disclosed.

Water is commonly used in dental procedures. An investigation into a cluster of outbreaks is ongoing, the CDC says.
(iStock)

Nontuberculous mycobacteria were transmitted to patients by dental unit waterlines, which the CDC defined as the “narrow-bore plastic tubing” that carries water through a “high-speed handpiece, air/water syringe, and ultrasonic scaler.”

An investigation into the cluster of outbreaks is ongoing and a preliminary site visit has been conducted, the CDC’s alert said.

“High numbers of common waterborne bacteria can be found in untreated dental unit water systems,” the CDC wrote.

Similar outbreaks at pediatric dental offices have happened in the past, including 71 dental patients in California — who were infected with odontogenic (infections that originate in the teeth or surrounding tissue) nontuberculous mycobacteria after receiving pulpotomy procedures in 2016.

A year earlier than that, 24 dental patients in Georgia were infected with odontogenic nontuberculous mycobacteria following the same procedure.

TIKTOK REVEALING DENTIST CAN DETECT PREGNANCY BY LOOKING AT PATIENT’S MOUTH STUNS USERS

“The outbreaks in California and Georgia involved young children, with ages ranging from 4 to 8 years,” the CDC wrote. 

“Many of the children developed severe infections with clinical diagnoses such as cervical lymphadenitis and mandibular or maxillary osteomyelitis, and required hospitalization, treatments such as intravenous antibiotics, and surgical procedures.”

Infections from bacteria-filled dental water can lead to mild or severe complications.
(iStock)

“Complications from their infections included permanent tooth loss, hearing loss, facial nerve palsy, and incision fibrosis,” the alert continued.

Dental waterline units are prone to biofilm formation and bacteria buildup when water flow rates are low and have frequent periods of stagnation.

“As a result, high numbers of common waterborne bacteria can be found in untreated dental unit water systems,” the CDC wrote.

 “Disease-causing microorganisms found in untreated dental unit water can include Legionella, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM).”

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Other dental procedures that could also pose a risk if people are exposed to tainted water include incisions, excisions, biopsies, periodontal surgeries, apical surgeries, implant surgeries, teeth extractions and bone removal, the CDC noted.

Dental professionals should make sure they’re working with sanitized tools and sterile water.
(iStock )

Dental surgeons and practitioners should only use “sterile solutions as a coolant or irrigant” while “using an appropriate delivery device, such as a sterile bulb syringe, sterile tubing that bypasses dental unit waterlines, or sterile single-use devices,” according to the CDC.

The agency recommends that dental professionals and facilities follow infection control guidelines in dental settings, monitor water quality and treat dental unit waterlines for patient safety.

Biofilm can be removed and prevented with routine sanitation practices, which could include disinfectants that meet Environmental Protection Agency regulatory standards for drinking water or commercial disinfectant products and devices.

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Dental providers should consult manufacturer instructions when handling dental equipment, the health agency said, to ensure they’re using “appropriate methods” and are effectively maintaining and monitoring the quality of dental water they utilize.

Dental patients can ask dental providers about their sanitation policies.
(iStock)

Dental patients and parents or guardians of pediatric dental patients should contact a dental provider if an infection is suspected post-treatment, the CDC’s advisory said.

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“Signs and symptoms of a postoperative dental infection could include a localized oral abscess, fever, or pain and swelling in the mouth or neck,” the CDC wrote. 

“Talk to your dental provider about their infection prevention and control practices and the steps their staff take to ensure safe treatment for all patients.”

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Michelle Murrell said her ‘miracle boy’ Blake died from a mystery case of bacterial meningitis

A family has been left reeling with the loss of their one-year-old ‘miracle boy’ Blake Murrell (pictured) after he tragically died of a mystery bout of meningitis

A family has told of their grief after mistaking their one-year-old ‘miracle boy’s’ symptoms with teething issues or a daycare bug – when he was suffering from a case of bacterial meningitis.

Sydney mum Michelle Murrell, 40, noticed her one-year-old son Blake seemed a little under the weather when she picked him up from child care on July 28.

She assumed he had contracted just another everyday virus, with symptoms including a fever and some vomiting. Blake even seemed like he was bouncing back. 

However, after 10 days Blake took a turn for the worse and on August 7 was rushed to the emergency department at Campbeltown Hospital, in the city’s south-west.

His condition deteriorated – with the little boy suffering swelling to the brain – and doctors quickly approved a transfer to Sydney Children’s Hospital. 

He was placed an induced coma the next day to try and give his body a better chance to heal, but he sadly never woke up.

The heartbroken family was told Blake’s brain swelling was too severe to fix, with the one-year-old succumbing to the illness on August 16.

Michelle said she had five miscarriages before managing to get pregnant through IVF to what she and her husband called their ‘miracle boy’ Blake

Michelle (left) said the family was staying strong as her other son, seven-year-old Lachlan (second from right), was seeking comfort in Blake’s (second from left) toys

Little Blake Murrell (pictured right) with his seven-year-old brother Lachlan

Michelle spoke to Daily Mail Australia about what happened to Blake, who she called a ‘miracle’, because he was conceived after multiple miscarriages and failed IVF rounds.

Ms Murrell said when Blake first got sick, he was also having teething issues, leading her to believe his symptoms were a combination of things.

Never once did it cross her mind that what her son had was bacterial meningitis, she added.

‘I first noticed Blake was sick when he started having a fever but we were not worried as he had been bringing home bugs from daycare constantly,’ she told Daily Mail Australia.

‘He started with a bit of a fever but he was also teething at the time with about three or four teeth coming through at once.

‘So we were keeping on top of that and he had some vomiting and fevers and that sort of thing but we weren’t overly concerned.’

Ms Murrell said over the next 10 days, Blake started to look and feel better, before going downhill again.

‘He would be all good and then suddenly be really, really lethargic, it was up and down throughout the week so I never felt the need to take him to hospital or anything, she said.

‘I’m a nurse so I just kept him hydrated and managed the fever until one night I noticed he was holding his head funny and that caught my attention.

‘He just looked really stiff and so I decided to take him to the hospital.’

Ms Murrell said doctors at Campbelltown Hospital tried to get his fluids up on August 7. 

‘He had a fever at the time and they took him straight in because he was quite dehydrated despite us keeping up his fluids,’ she said.

‘Then he started doing seizure like stuff, it was like jerkiness in his arm and his leg.

‘They then took him to do blood work and after they got the results they could see that he had quite a bad infection.

‘They covered him with four different antibiotics and I suppose meningitis was in the back of their mind but they never really gave a clear diagnosis of it at the time.’

The next day, Blake was transferred to Sydney Children’s Hospital and admitted into their ICU department.

Michelle (left) spoke to Daily Mail Australia about what happened to Blake (centre, with his brother Lachlan right), who she called a ‘miracle’, because he was conceived after multiple miscarriages and failed rounds of IVF

Blake’s mother Michelle Murrell, 40, said she noticed he was ill after picking him up from daycare but assumed it was just another virus but it turned out to be bacterial meningitis

‘They gave him a breathing tube, sedated him and put him under, not because he was struggling to breathe but because of the swelling on his brain,’ Ms Murrell said.

That day was the last time Blake was awake.

Ms Murrell said doctors officially diagnosed him with bacterial meningitis days later and told her ‘there was nothing they could do’.

‘They said the antibiotics he had been taking had started fighting the infection as they could see that but because of the swelling to his brain, it was too much trauma and they told me there is nothing we can do,’ Ms Murrell said.

‘We were told that on the Friday and so we had our other son come in and family as well to say what we needed to say.

‘From there it was just a matter of when we were ready to make the decision to turn off his support.

‘We knew we were never going to be ready but we didn’t want to drag it out so after we all said what we needed, we let him pass.’

Blake died on August 16 and while Michelle said the family was staying strong, her other son, seven-year-old Lachlan, was seeking comfort in Blake’s toys to get through the nights.

He was taken to Campbelltown Hospital on August 7 before being transferred to Sydney Children’s Hospital the following day and put into ICU (pictured is Blake with his family, including brother Lachlan and mother Michelle)

‘Lachlan is doing well during the day at school but he is just struggling at night,’ Ms Murrell said.

‘For the last few weeks he has been coming in at night and he cuddles his brothers toys, some of Blake’s cuddly toys.’

Ms Murrell said she had five miscarriages before managing to get pregnant through IVF to what she and her husband called their ‘miracle boy’. 

‘He was our little miracle, he was an IVF baby and we tried so many times,’ she said.

‘We call him our little miracle boy as we didn’t know if it would happen, it just isn’t fair. It’s just really not fair.

‘I had several miscarriages before him, Lachlan was natural but then I had multiple miscarriages and attempted IVF five times before we finally got Blake.’

Blake died on Tuesday, August 16 after doctors said the swelling on the brain was too much and told the family there is nothing they could do

Blake’s ashes have been returned to the family, which Ms Murrell said gave the family some peace.

‘It’s good to have Blake back home with us,’ she said.

‘His ashes are just in our bedroom in a little heart box, it’s like a memory box, a nice box with his stuff.

Ms Murrell said the donations from GoFundMe also helped her and the family financially through the tumultuous time.

‘I haven’t been able to go back to work yet and we wouldn’t have managed financially if it wasn’t for the outpouring of support and donations and we are truly grateful for the care and support,’ she said.

‘I don’t know what we would have done if we didn’t have that, we are just trying to move forward as best as we can.

‘I know I need to go back to work financially, I just haven’t felt able to yet.’

SIGNS OF MENINGITIS IN CHILDREN

SYMPTOMS IN CHILDREN UNDER TWO

– High fever 

– Constant crying 

– Excessive sleepiness or irritability 

– Difficulty waking from sleep 

– Inactivity or sluggishness 

– Not waking to eat 

– Poor feeding 

– Vomiting 

– A bulge in the soft spot on top of a baby’s head (fontanel) 

– Stiffness in the body and neck 

 

 SYMPTOMS IN CHILDREN OVER TWO 

– Sudden high fever

– Stiff neck

– Severe headache that seems different from normal

– Headache with nausea or vomiting

– Confusion or difficulty concentrating

– Seizures

– Sleepiness or difficulty waking

– Sensitivity to light

– No appetite or thirst

– Skin rash 

 

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Beto O’Rourke off the campaign trail in Texas with bacterial infection

“After feeling ill on Friday, I went to Methodist Hospital in San Antonio where I was diagnosed with a bacterial infection,” O’Rourke said in a statement. “While my symptoms have improved, I will be resting at home in El Paso in accordance with the doctors’ recommendations. I am sorry to have had to postpone events because of this, but promise to be back on the road as soon as I am able,” he added.

He thanked the staff at Methodist Hospital. “The extraordinary team there — from custodians to nurses and doctors — gave me excellent care and attention, including IV antibiotics and rest,” O’Rourke said.

The development comes at a critical point in the Texas gubernatorial contest, as O’Rourke looks to narrow Abbott’s lead in the contest.

The former congressman first shot to national stardom with a near-miss Senate campaign in 2018 against GOP Sen. Ted Cruz. But his failed 2020 Democratic presidential primary run left his national brand badly dented in the eyes of many within the party.

And Republicans argue that many of the positions he took during that run, including advocating for mandatory assault weapon buybacks, will hurt him in Texas.

Still, O’Rourke remains popular among Democrats on his home turf — building a following in Texas much larger than any other Democrat in a generation. In between his campaigns, he remained active, campaigning for state legislative candidates and activating his volunteers when the state’s power grid failed in early 2021.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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