Tag Archives: sepsis

Postacute Effects of COVID on par With Those of Sepsis, Flu – Medscape

  1. Postacute Effects of COVID on par With Those of Sepsis, Flu Medscape
  2. The role of pulmonary dysfunction and COVID-19 severity in the development of Long COVID News-Medical.Net
  3. Researchers discover unique blood plasma protein patterns in patients with long COVID Medical Xpress
  4. Repeated antibiotic exposure and risk of hospitalisation and death following COVID-19 infection (OpenSAFELY): a matched case–control study The Lancet
  5. Detrimental effects of COVID-19 in the brain and therapeutic options for long COVID: The role of Epstein–Barr virus and the gut–brain axis | Molecular Psychiatry Nature.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Woman suffers from sepsis and HEART FAILURE weeks after recovering from COVID-19

A woman was left fighting for her life after she started suffering from sepsis and heart failure weeks after recovering from COVID-19 – which resulted in her spending 10 days in a coma. 

Jamie Waddell, 36, from Springfield, Illinois, tested positive for COVID-19 back in August.

She suffered from ‘body aches, fatigue, fever, and sinus congestion’ for about 10 days before she started to feel better.

After recovering, the 36-year-old returned back to work – but a few weeks later, she suddenly started to feel dizzy and lightheaded while out for a walk.

A woman was left fighting for her life after she started suffering from sepsis and heart failure weeks after recovering from COVID-19, which resulted in her spending 10 days in a coma

Jamie Waddell, 36, from Springfield, Illinois, tested positive for COVID-19 back in August, and she suffered from ‘body aches, fatigue, fever, and sinus congestion’ for about 10 days

After recovering, the 36-year-old returned back to work, but a few weeks later, she suddenly started to feel dizzy and lightheaded while out for a walk

Jamie brushed it off, but in the days that followed, she began suffering from ‘overwhelmingly bad’ fatigue which left her ‘barely’ able to move.

She decided to go to the emergency room, and was stunned when doctors told her that she had pneumonia, heart failure and sepsis

She decided to go to the emergency room, and was stunned when doctors told her that she had pneumonia, heart failure and sepsis – all likely caused by the COVID-19 weeks earlier.

By the time she arrived at the hospital, Jamie’s ‘heart and lungs were basically not working’ anymore and her ‘blood pressure and oxygen levels were really low.’

Doctors quickly implanted a device known as an Impella to help her heart pump blood, but they feared she might need a transplant.

She was in a coma for 10 days, but ‘miraculously’ got better on her own. And now, she’s sharing her story as a warning to others.

Jamie – who is vaccinated and boosted – recently spoke to the Today show about the horrifying ordeal, and she recalled feeling surprised over how sick she felt when she caught COVID-19 four months ago.

‘Body aches, fatigue, fever, your respiratory stuff, sinus congestion – I was sick for about 10 days before I started to feel better,’ she said. ‘I did start to feel better. I was back to work.’

By the time she arrived at the hospital, Jamie’s ‘heart and lungs were basically not working’ anymore and her ‘blood pressure and oxygen levels were really low’

She was in a coma for 10 days, but ‘miraculously’ got better. And now, she’s sharing her story as a warning to others

The 36-year-old described herself as someone who is ‘very active with no health history’ and said she normally walks three to five miles a day 

What is sepsis?  

Sepsis is the body’s extreme response to an infection. 

It happens when an infection you already have triggers a chain reaction throughout your body.

Without timely treatment, sepsis can rapidly lead to tissue damage, organ failure and death.

Symptoms include high heart rate or weak pulse, fever, shivering or feeling very cold, confusion or disorientation, shortness of breath, extreme pain or discomfort, and clammy or sweaty skin.

Source: CDC

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The 36-year-old – who described herself as someone who is ‘very active with no health history’ – normally walks three to five miles a day, but just after Labor Day when she was finishing up one of her daily walks she said she started to feel ‘very faint.’

‘I was walking down the street going, “Oh God, don’t pass out,”‘ she remembered. ‘That’s unusual for me. I am pretty active.

‘[But I thought], “Maybe I just took too long of a walk.” It was fairly warm that day. I didn’t think anything of it and went to work the next day.’

But as she started to get more and more ill, she decided to go to the hospital.

‘At that point, I knew something was wrong. You’re not getting better, you’re just feeling bad. You can barely move,’ she continued.

‘Based on the fact that I kept feeling worse and worse, I’m guessing my heart function had probably been declining over that whole week, and by the time I got to the ER, I was septic.

‘They did an echocardiogram. My heart function was really low. I was in heart failure.’

Doctors were sure Jamie would need a heart transplant, but she thankfully started to improve on her own.

‘We were amazed,’ one of her doctors, Dr. Bow ‘Ben’ Chung, told the outlet. ‘It was miraculous.’

Jamie – who is vaccinated and boosted – recently spoke to the Today show about the horrifying ordeal

She spent almost three weeks in total in the hospital, and during that time, she lost a lot of muscle which resulted in her having trouble walking at first. She is seen with her boyfriend

She needed to do physical therapy to regain her strength afterwards, but she has now fully recovered. She is seen in October, one month after the incident

Jamie spent almost three weeks in total in the hospital and during that time, she lost a lot of muscle which resulted in her having trouble walking at first.

She needed to do physical therapy to regain her strength afterwards – but she has now fully recovered.

As for the biggest lesson she learned from the incident – don’t push yourself too hard and too fast after recovering from an illness. 

‘I work too much. If you’re not feeling good, you should take the time to rest,’ she stressed. ‘Appreciate your body for what it can do.’

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Sepsis is one of the most expensive medical conditions in the world – new research clarifies how it can lead to cell death

Bacteria (clusters of light pink, surrounded by larger magenta blood cells) can cause deadly infections, but overreactive immune responses can deliver the lethal blow. Scharvik/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Sepsis is a life-threatening condition arising from the body’s overreactive response against an infection, leading it to injure its own tissues and organs. The first known reference to “sepsis” dates back more than 2,700 years, when the Greek poet Homer used it as a derivative of the word “sepo,” meaning “I rot.”

Despite dramatic improvements in understanding the immunological mechanisms behind sepsis, it still remains a major medical concern, affecting 750,000 people in the U.S. and nearly 50 million people globally each year. Sepsis accounted for 11 million deaths worldwide in 2017, and is the most expensive medical condition in the U.S., costing over tens of billions of dollars annually.

We are researchers who study how certain types of bacteria interact with cells during infections. We wanted to understand exactly how an overreactive immune response can result in detrimental and even lethal effects like sepsis. In our newly published research, we discovered the cells and molecules that potentially trigger death from sepsis.

TNF in autoimmunity and sepsis

The body’s response to infection starts when immune cells recognize components of the invading pathogen. These cells then release molecules like cytokines that help eliminate the infection. Cytokines are a broad group of small proteins that recruit other immune cells to the site of infection or injury.

While cytokines play an essential role in the immune response, excessive and uncontrolled cytokine production can lead to a dangerous cytokine storm associated with sepsis. Cytokine storms were first seen in the context of graft versus host disease, arising from transplant complications. They can also occur during viral infections, including COVID-19. This uncontrolled immune response can lead to multi-organ failure and death.

Among the hundreds of cytokines that exist, tumor necrosis factor, or TNF, stands tall as the most potent and the most studied for nearly the past 50 years.

Tumor necrosis factor owes its name to its ability to induce tumor cells to die when the immune system is stimulated by a bacterial extract called Coley’s toxin, named after the researcher who identified it over a century ago. This toxin was later recognized to be lipopolysaccharide, or LPS, a component of the outer membrane of certain types of bacteria. LPS is the strongest known trigger of TNF, which, once on alert, aids in the recruitment of immune cells to the infection site to eliminate invading bacteria.

In normal conditions, TNF promotes beneficial processes such as cell survival and tissue regeneration. However, TNF production must be tightly regulated to avoid sustained inflammation and continuous proliferation of immune cells. Uncontrolled TNF production can lead to the development of rheumatoid arthritis and similar inflammatory conditions.

In infection conditions, TNF must also be tightly regulated to prevent excessive tissue and organ damage from inflammation and an overactive immune response. When TNF is left uncontrolled during infections, it can lead to sepsis. For several decades, studies of septic shock were modeled by investigating responses to bacterial LPS. In this model, LPS activates certain immune cells that trigger the production of inflammatory cytokines, in particular TNF. This then leads to excessive immune cell proliferation, recruitment and death, ultimately resulting in tissue and organ damage. Too strong of an immune response is not a good thing.

Researchers have shown that blocking TNF activity can effectively treat numerous autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease. Use of TNF blockers has dramatically increased in the past decades, reaching a market size of roughly $40 billion.

However, TNF blockers have been unsuccessful in preventing the cytokine storm that can arise from COVID-19 infections and sepsis. This is in part because exactly how TNF triggers its toxic effects on the body is still poorly understood despite years of research.

How TNF can be lethal

Studying sepsis might provide some clues as to how TNF mediates how the immune system responds to infection. In acute inflammatory conditions such as sepsis, TNF blockers are less able to address TNF overproduction. However, studies in mice show that neutralizing TNF can prevent the death of the animal from bacterial LPS. Although researchers do not yet understand the reason for this discrepancy, it highlights the need for further understanding how TNF contributes to sepsis.

Blood cells made in the bone marrow, or myeloid cells, are known to be the major producers of TNF. So we wondered if myeloid cells also mediate TNF-induced death.

First, we identified which particular molecules might offer protection from TNF-induced death. When we injected mice with a lethal dose of TNF, we found that mice lacking either TRIF or CD14, two proteins typically associated with immune responses to bacterial LPS but not TNF, had improved survival. This finding parallels our earlier work identifying these factors as regulators of a protein complex that controls cell death and inflammation in response to LPS.

Next, we wanted to figure out which cells are involved in TNF-induced death. When we injected a lethal dose of TNF in mice lacking the two proteins in two specific types of myeloid cells, neutrophils and macrophages, mice had reduced symptoms of sepsis and improved survival. This finding positions macrophages and neutrophils as major triggers for TNF-mediated death in mice.

Our results also suggest TRIF and CD14 as potential treatment targets for sepsis, with the ability to both reduce cell death and inflammation.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. It was written by: Alexander (Sasha) Poltorak, Tufts University and Hayley Muendlein, Tufts University. Like this article? subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

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The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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BBC’s Sarah McMullen suffers sepsis after segment on illness

A British TV reporter is warning others about how she contracted sepsis and failed to spot its symptoms – even after she had interviewed a woman who almost died of the illness just a month prior.

Sarah McMullen, a journalist with BBC Scotland, spent six days in a hospital after she developed the life-threatening result of the body’s radical response to an infection.

The condition also is known as the “hidden killer” due to the difficulty to detect it as the immune response attacks the body and risks organ failure.

McMullen fell ill just a month after she had interviewed sepsis survivor Kimberley Bradley, who was left comatose for eight days, on “The Nine,” the BBC reported.

Bradley said she had contracted meningococcal septicemia, which developed into full-blown sepsis, also known as blood poisoning.

BBC Scotland journalist Sarah McMullen contracted sepsis and failed to spot its symptoms.
Twitter / @SarahMcMullanTV
McMullen had recently interviewed sepsis survivor Kimberley Bradley, who was left comatose for eight days.
BBC

“A month after doing this interview, I ended up very unwell with sepsis myself. Resulting in an A and E visit, a week in hospital and a couple more weeks of tablets and rest,” McMullen, 30, said on Twitter, using the British term for the emergency room.

The journalist sought to further educate the public and urged people who have the symptoms to get immediate help.

“I should’ve acted sooner,” she acknowledged.

McMullen told BBC Radio Scotland’s “Drivetime” that Bradley “spoke through all of the symptoms and what to look out for and what to remember and when to get help and I did not remember them well enough.”

She said she began feeling unwell at her studio in Glasgow, where she got cold and developed goose bumps.

“Then I started physically shaking and all the color drained from my face,” McMullen said. “My lips were turning blue. My hands were chalk white, like you had been standing outside in winter for hours.”

The journalist said recognizing the symptoms “is the difference between it being life or death in some instances,”
Twitter / @SarahMcMullanTV

She said she “felt like something mentally might be happening to me because I was so confused and quite weepy, actually.”

Later, McMullen tried to sleep off the symptoms but they got progressively worse and she finally sought help about two days later.

When she arrived at the hospital, she was admitted as a category two patient.

“Category one is life-threatening so I was very unwell,” she said, explaining that she was given antibiotics and morphine as her temperature spiked.

McMullen ended up spending six days at the hospital.

“It could have been a lot worse. That’s what I was told on several occasions,” she said. “The doctors kept saying to me, ‘You have been very lucky here.’”

The broadcaster urged people to seek immediate help if they develop symptoms like a rapid rise in temperature or uncontrolled shivering.

“It really is the difference between it being life or death in some instances,” she said.

Sepsis symptoms also include a high heart rate or weak pulse; confusion or disorientation; shortness of breath; extreme pain or discomfort; and clammy or sweaty skin, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

On Monday, McMullen said in a tweet: “Thank you everyone for the kind well wishes. Very glad to be back to work, back in the studio and back to business.”



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Neonatal sepsis: the new threat posed by superbugs

“This makes the need for disinfection and maintaining a protocol that ensures a clean, hygienic environment exceedingly important,” says Sankar. However, basic soap and water are lacking in half the healthcare facilities across the globe, according to a WHO/UNICEF report released in  in 2022, contributing to the risk of infections in mothers and newborns.

Other simple measures can help prevent infection in healthcare settings, such as wearing sterile gowns in intensive care units, swabbing and cleaning surfaces and equipment, and disinfecting the skin of the newborn before administering injections or drips. But it requires training and adequate staffing to implement them, alongside teaching good hygiene practices to parents, says Shahidullah.

Bangladesh is also aiming to encourage more women to give birth in hospitals – which despite their own superbug struggles, tend to be the safer option. Almost half of Bangladeshi women still give birth at home, which comes with a higher risk of contracting infections. In Nepal, neonatal sepsis was found to be higher among babies born to mothers who did not attend antenatal check-ups, again highlighting the importance of support for prospective parents.

Ultimately, tackling the drug resistance crisis will require a broad range of tools, experts say. 

“For more widespread change, we need to consider antimicrobial resistance as a socio-political challenge and not just a medical one,” says Abdul Ghafur, a consultant in infectious diseases at the Apollo Cancer Institute in the Southern Indian city of Chennai. Together with other Indian doctors, he is also a vocal campaigner on fighting the superbug threat. “Proper sanitation at home, in healthcare institutions and in communities is key to dealing with neonatal sepsis aggravated by [antimicrobial resistance] and to prevent re-infection in children.”   

Finding new antibiotics should be seen as an immediate priority: “Covid has shown us that India can be the pharmacy of the world, and develop state-of-the-art drugs,” he says.

Ghafur suggests focusing on developing tests to identify the source of the infection as quickly as possible. “A rapid diagnostic test could help doctors zero in on the right antibiotic to prescribe within an hour, which could significantly lower the risk of death. New antibiotics and vaccines can be developed for bacteria that are now resistant to existing antibiotics,” he says. In his view this should be a global effort, with governments working together with private companies.

For families like Mukta’s, who lost her son to sepsis, these advances come too late. But tackling the antibiotics crisis, and the infection risk around birth, could help others give their babies a safe start – and help doctors protect and save those in their care.

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Intravenous Vitamin C in Adults with Sepsis in the Intensive Care Unit

From the Departments of Medicine (F. Lamontagne, M.-C.B., H.Q.M.) and Anesthesiology (F.D.), Université de Sherbrooke, the Department of Pharmacy (B.B.), Centre de Recherche du CHU de Sherbrooke, Centre Intégré Universitaire de Santé et de Services Sociaux de l’Estrie–Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke (F. Lamontagne, M.-H.M., J.M., F.D., E. Carbonneau), and Bishop’s University (D.C.), Sherbrooke, QC, the Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery (S.S.), the Department of Medicine (D.J.C., G.H.G., B.R., T.M., M.O.M., E.P.B.-C., S.S.K.), the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact (D.J.C., G.H.G., B.R., M.O.M., L.H., E.P.B.-C., F.C.), and the Population Health Research Institute (E.P.B.-C.), McMaster University, the Department of Critical Care, St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton (D.J.C.), the Intensive Care Unit, Juravinski Hospital (T.M.), and Respiratory Therapy, Hamilton Health Sciences (L.H.), Hamilton, ON, the Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre (R. Pinto, N.M., N.K.J.A.), the Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Toronto (S.M., N.K.J.A.), and Sinai Health System (S.M.), Toronto, the Departments of Critical Care Medicine (D.K.H., D.M.M., M.H.), Public Health Sciences (A.G.D.), and Medicine (D.M.M.), Queen’s University, and Kingston Health Sciences Centre (A.G.D., D.M.M.), Kingston, ON, the Department of Pharmacy, Ottawa Hospital (S.K.), Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (S.K., I.W., R. Porteous), and the Department of Surgery, University of Ottawa (A.J.E.S.), Ottawa, ON, the Massawippi Valley Foundation, Ayer’s Cliff, QC (D.C.), the Department of Medicine, Université de Montréal (M.C.), the Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (M.C., M.L., E. Charbonney), the Centre de Recherche de l’Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal (E. Charbonney), and the Departments of Medicine and Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre (J.S.), Montreal, QC, the Department of Medicine (F. Lauzier) and the Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care (F. Lauzier, A.F.T.), Université Laval, the Critical Care Medicine Service (F. Lauzier, A.F.T.), and the Research Center (F. Lauzier, A.F.T.), CHU de Québec–Université Laval, Quebec, QC, the Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton (O.G.R., D.J.K.), the Division of Intensive Care, Department of Medicine, CHU Dr. Georges L. Dumont, Moncton, NB (R.L.), the Department of Surgery, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, ON (T.S.M.), the Division of Intensive Care Medicine, Island Health Authority, Victoria, BC (G.W.), and the Department of Medicine, Halton Healthcare, Oakville, ON (S.S.K.) — all in Canada; the Cardiothoracic and Vascular Intensive Care Unit, Auckland City Hospital (R. Parke, S.P.M.), and the School of Nursing, University of Auckland (R. Parke), Auckland, the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, Newtown (R. Parke, S.P.M., P.J.Y.), the Intensive Care Unit, Wellington Hospital, Wellington (P.J.Y.), and the Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin (P.T.) — all in New Zealand; the Department of Critical Care Medicine, Apollo Hospitals, Chennai, and George Institute for Global Health, New Delhi — both in India (B.K.T.V.); the Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Raymond-Poincaré Hospital (Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris [AP-HP]), and Fédération Hospitalo-Universitaire SEPSIS, Garches (D.A.), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, University Paris-Saclay Campus UVSQ, Versailles (D.A.), and Service de Médecine Intensive Réanimation, AP-HP, Hôpitaux Universitaires Henri-Mondor, Groupe de Recherche Clinique CARMAS, and Institut Mondor de Recherche Biomédicale, Université Paris Est Créteil, Créteil (A.M.-D.) — all in France; the College of Medicine, King Saud Bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, King Abdullah International Medical Research Center, and the Department of Intensive Care, King Abdulaziz Medical City, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs — all in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (Y.M.A.); and the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia (R. Parke, S.P.M., P.J.Y.).

Dr. Lamontagne can be contacted at [email protected] or at the Department of Medicine, Université de Sherbrooke, 3001 12th Ave. N., Sherbrooke, Quebec J1H 5N4, Canada. Dr. Adhikari can be contacted at [email protected] or at the Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 2075 Bayview Ave., Room D1.08, Toronto M4N 3M5, Canada.

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Woman left with shark hand following battle with sepsis

Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the ER.

A UK woman’s hand was left looking like a cartoon shark head after doctors sewed the appendage inside her stomach to fight a vicious infection. A video chronicling her Jaws-dropping mitt currently boasts over 75 million views on TikTok.

“I wasn’t aware my hand was going to look like a shark’s head till it had actually been released from my abdomen,” said Sadie Kemp, 34, of her bizarre affliction, the Mirror reported.

In the video, which she did “not expect to go viral,” the 34-year-old Petersborough native can be seen making her Megalodon-esque mitt “hum” the “Jaws” theme before dunking it in a bowl of water.

A UK woman’s hand was left looking like a cartoon shark head after doctors sewed the appendage inside her stomach to fight a vicious infection.

Kemp’s nearly fatal ordeal occurred Christmas day after the former health-care worker reported to the hospital after experiencing sharp pain in her kidney. Doctors diagnosed Kemp with a kidney stone and transferred her to the emergency ward to remove it.

Disaster struck during the operation after the mother of two’s limbs became afflicted with sepsis, a life-threatening condition that occurs when the body attempts to fight off infection and ends up attacking and damaging its own tissues. It is the leading cause of death in hospitals, often resulting from complications during surgery.

“I did a video of my story and I have been told it is trending which is absolutely amazing,” gushed Kemp.
TikTok/@sadiessepsisjourney

In order to save her life, medics placed Kemp into a medical coma for 11 days, and ended up amputating all the fingers on her left hand, Peterborough Today reported. Doctors then sewed her hand inside a pouch in her abdomen to maintain blood circulation, which Kemp says resulted in her high-fiver becoming a dead ringer for a shark.

“I looked at it for the first time and I moved what was left of my thumb and I was just like wow it looks like a shark,” Kemp explained of her hand, which also evokes a lobster claw or boxing glove.

“I wasn’t aware my hand was going to look like a shark’s head till it had actually been released from my abdomen,” said Kemp.
TikTok/@sadiessepsisjourney

Thankfully, the gutsy gal has taken the sharky side effect in stride, even using her predator-evoking appendage to perform tricks on camera, including pantomiming a fish’s movements and applying makeup. In one clip with 4 million views, she can be seen making her shark hand lip-sync along to the addicting “Baby Shark” song like a fleshy shadow puppet.

“I did a video of my story and I have been told it is trending which is absolutely amazing,” gushed Kemp, who has been posting on TikTok for only a week.

“I have lost a lot through sepsis, my limbs, a relationship, independence and I just don’t want it happening to as many people as it does happen to,” she said.
TikTok/@sadiessepsisjourney

Unfortunately, the poor woman isn’t out of the woods yet as doctors will reportedly have to amputate her other hand and both her legs below the knees, Peterborough Today reported.

In addition, Kemp, who recently lost her job at the NHS, fears she could also lose her home, which was provided by a charity following a financially devastating divorce.

@sadiessepsisjourney

Today I learnt how to do my make up with my shark hand I have spent my time in hospital adapting instead of looking at all the negatives I have been trying really hard to still be me thank you all for your continued support you are all helping me with my mental health and you’re positive comments

♬ Girls, Girls, Girls – Mötley Crüe

Kemp’s friend Stephanie King recently created a GoFundMe page to help support her and her family with “expenses and fees since being in hospital with sepsis.” It has raised over $38,000 as of Tuesday morning.

Kemp says she ultimately “wants to raise awareness about the dangers of sepsis.”

Sepsis is the leading cause of death within hospitals.
TikTok/@sadiessepsisjourney

“I have lost a lot through sepsis, my limbs, a relationship, independence and I just don’t want it happening to as many people as it does happen to,” she said.

Data from 2017 linked sepsis to approximately 11 million deaths worldwide — roughly 20% of annual deaths worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

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Student loses legs after eating friend’s leftover takeaway and developing deadly sepsis

‘JC’ had a severely high temperature with a heart rate of 166 beats per minute when he was taken to hospital and sedated after eating his flatmate’s leftovers

‘JC’ developed sepsis (

Image: Chubbyemu / YouTube)

A student who lost lost his legs after eating his friend’s takeaway developed deadly sepsis.

The man, who was only identified as JC ate the takeaway, a chicken noodle dish his friend had ordered the night before.

But he immediately became ill, according to the New England Journal of Medicine.

He had a severely high temperature with a heart rate of 166 beats per minute when he was taken to hospital and sedated.

The young man had no allergies and had all his childhood vaccinations according to doctors’ records.

He rarely drank alcohol, the Journal said, smoked two packs of cigarettes a week and marijuana every day.







‘JC’ had to have limbs amputated after developing sepsis
(

Image:

Chubbyemu / YouTube)


The Daily Star reports his condition worsened and he had to be airlifted to another hospital by helicopter for further treatment.

The report in the Journal said: “The patient had been well until 20 hours before this admission when diffuse abdominal pain and nausea developed after he ate rice, chicken, and lo mein leftovers from a restaurant meal.”

The NEJM said JC worked part-time at a restaurant and had not travelled recently or had any other exposure to animals or ill people.







The student ate the chicken and noodle dish from the previous night and immediately started to feel ill
(

Image:

Chubbyemu / YouTube)


It reported his dad had coronary artery disease and his brother had suffered viral meningitis when he was six weeks old.

The Journal said: “The abdominal pain and vomiting were followed by the development of chills, generalized weakness, progressively worsening diffuse myalgias, chest pain, shortness of breath, headache, neck stiffness, and blurry vision.

“Five hours before this admission, purplish discolouration of the skin developed and a friend took the patient to the emergency department of another hospital for evaluation.

“It was confirmed he was suffering from an aggressive bacterial infection that made his kidneys fail and his blood began to clot.”







The patient was so ill he was taken to the intensive care unit of another hospital by a helicopter for further treatment
(

Image:

New England Journal of Medicine)


The bacteria in his blood results came back positive for Neisseria meningitidis which is a form of sepsis which can kill sufferers.

It’s believed he became infected by the bacteria through his saliva and he had missed a booster jab for the meningococcal vaccine which he was meant to get at the age of 16.

The tissue on his fingers developed gangrene, as did his legs down to his feet resulting in the amputations of parts of all of his fingers and below-knee amputations.

The incident has since been branded a “freak accident” by YouTube doctor, Dr Bernard and thankfully, the student survived the ordeal.

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Student has both legs amputated after eating pal’s leftover takeaway in fridge which caused life-threatening sepsis

A STUDENT was forced to have both legs amputated after eating their housemate’s leftovers from the fridge led to devastating sepsis.

The student immediately began to feel ill after eating a chicken and noodle dish which had been bought from a restaurant the previous night.

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The student took his housemate’s leftovers from the fridge [DRAMATISATION]Credit: youtube/dr bernard

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The patient quickly developed purple blotches as the skin rottedCredit: new england medical journal

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Parts of all of their fingers had to be amputatedCredit: new england medical journal

4

They also lost both of their legs below the kneesCredit: New England Medical Journal

His symptoms started with a strong stomach ache and nausea before his skin turned purple and a friend took him to hospital.

He developed a severely high temperature, a pulse of 166 beats per minute, and had to be sedated, according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

After the sepsis spread to his limbs, he was forced to have part of all 10 fingers amputated, as well as both legs below the knees.

The student, identified only as JC in a YouTube video illustrating the case, was so ill that he had to be taken to the intensive care unit of another hospital by helicopter for further treatment.

He reportedly had no known allergies, had received his childhood vaccinations, and wasn’t a big drinker, although he went through two packs of cigarettes a week and smoked cannabis daily.

“The patient had been well until 20 hours before this admission when diffuse abdominal pain and nausea developed after he ate rice, chicken, and lo mein leftovers from a restaurant meal,” the report said.

“Five hours before this admission, purplish discoloration [sic] of the skin developed, and a friend took the patient to the emergency department of another hospital for evaluation.”

In the YouTube video explaining the case made by user ‘Dr Bernard’, he explained that the severe symptoms the patient was suffering from seemed likely to have been an aggressive bacterial infection.

He suffered kidney failure and blood clots within 24 hours of eating the food.

Blood tests from the first hospital he visited found that his blood contained the bacteria Neisseria meningitidis.

Dr Bernard explained: “When bacteria is present in the blood, the entire body’s blood vessels dilate, dropping the blood pressure preventing oxygen from getting into the organs.”

As his hands and feet become cold, they are starved of oxygen

Dr BernardYouTuber

He went on: “Little clots form everywhere, as they get lodged into small blood vessels blocking blood flow.

“As his hands and feet become cold, they are starved of oxygen.”

When skin tissue is starved of blood, it begins to turn purple and rot, in a process called necrosis.


What is sepsis

  • Sepsis is always triggered by an infection – but is not contagious and can’t be passed from person to person
  • It is usually spread through conditions such as pneumonia, UTIs, and appendicitis
  • A common sepsis symptom is when the patient suffers a minor cut and the area around the wound becomes red, swollen, and warm to the touch
  • Sepsis later affects individual organs throughout the body, and in severe cases can lead to organ failure
  • When more than one organ stops functioning, the patient experiences cardio-circulatory failure leading to a sudden drop in blood pressure – more commonly known as septic shock
  • Sepsis cases in the UK are increasing, with around 123,000 cases each year in England, and an estimated 37,000 deaths
  • According to the UK Sepsis Trust, around 60,000 people in Britain every year suffer permanent, life-changing after effects

Although the patient’s condition stabilised, the tissue on his fingers developed gangrene, as did his legs down to his feet.

He was forced to have part of all 10 fingers amputated, as well as both legs below the knees.

The life-threatening bacteria is known to spread through saliva.
JC’s housemate had thrown up after eating some of the meal the previous night, which JC hadn’t known before he started eating them.

Doctors discovered that although JC had received his first meningococcal vaccine before middle school, he never had the booster shot four years later when he was 16, which is recommended.

Dr Bernard described the incident as a “freak accident”, although it’s not clear what caused the food to have the bacteria in it.

JC gained consciousness some 26 days later and his condition improved, although with his life changed forever.

Sepsis is a life-threatening reaction to an infection, caused when the immune system overreacts to an infection and starts to damage the body’s tissue and organs.

It is the primary cause of death from infection around the world – more than bowel, breast, and prostate cancer combined.



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Peterborough woman 34, had to have ALL her fingers amputated after kidney stone agony led to sepsis

A 34-year-old mother needs all of her fingers amputated and could lose her legs after being struck down with sepsis.

Sadie Kemp, from Peterborough, was building a toy kitchen with her two-year-old son on Christmas Day when she felt a sharp pain in her kidneys.

The mother-of-two was taken to hospital screaming in agony, but doctors only gave her painkillers and said she should come back if it got worse. 

By the early hours of Boxing Day Ms Kemp was back, and claimed she was placed in an induced coma for two weeks.

Doctors discovered her pain was down to a kidney stone which led to an infection and then triggered sepsis — a life-threatening condition where the body attacks its own tissue.

It can also cause blood clots which cut off blood supply to limbs and leave patients needing amputations. 

The NHS Test and Trace worker had her left fingers amputated this week, and is set to lose all five on her right hand when her wounds have healed. Medics have yet to decide whether her toes, feet and legs can be saved. 

Describing her ordeal, Ms Kemp revealed when she came round she told her mother that she ‘should have turned off the life support’.

But her mother asked if she would rather see her children — Kenzie, 16, and Hendrix, 2 — at her bedside or at her grave.

Ms Kemp said: ‘I’ve realised I have been given a second chance at life. The doctors have told me they are so confused that I’m still here, I shouldn’t be alive given the amount of poison I had in my blood.’ 

Before sepsis (left) and afterwards (right). Sadie Kemp, 34, from Peterborough, felt a sudden pain in her abdomen on Christmas Day but thought it was because she was helping her son build a toy kitchen

Ms Kemp pictured with son Hendrix, two, in hospital. She says they are having to move house because she no longer qualifies for the property

Ms Kemp is pictured above before she was diagnosed with sepsis, which has led to her fingers needing to be amputated. Doctors are also considering whether her legs need to be removed

Ms Kemp is pictured above in hospital. Ms Kemp said: ‘I’ve realised I have been given a second chance at life. The doctors have told me they are so confused that I’m still here, I shouldn’t be alive given the amount of poison I had in my blood.’

Sepsis, known as the ‘silent killer’, strikes when an infection sparks a violent immune response in which the body attacks its own organs. It can be triggered from any type of infection. 

It is the leading cause of avoidable death, killing around 45,000 a year, and the Daily Mail has long campaigned for more awareness.

If caught early, the underlying infection can be controlled by antibiotics before the body goes into overdrive — ultimately leading to death within a matter of minutes.

WHAT IS SEPSIS? 

Sepsis occurs when the body reacts to an infection by attacking its own organs and tissues. 

About 45,000 people die from sepsis every year in the UK. Worldwide, someone dies from the condition every 3.5 seconds. 

Sepsis has similar symptoms to flu, gastroenteritis and a chest infection.

These include:

  • Slurred speech or confusion
  • Extreme shivering or muscle pain
  • Passing no urine in a day
  • Severe breathlessness
  • It feels like you are dying
  • Skin mottled or discoloured

Symptoms in children are:

  • Fast breathing
  • Fits or convulsions
  • Mottled, bluish or pale skin
  • Rashes that do not fade when pressed
  • Lethargy
  • Feeling abnormally cold

Under fives may be vomiting repeatedly, not feeding or not urinating for 12 hours. 

Anyone can develop sepsis but it is most common in people who have recently had surgery, have a urinary catheter or have stayed in hospital for a long time.

Other at-risk people include those with weak immune systems, chemotherapy patients, pregnant women, the elderly and the very young.

Treatment varies depending on the site of the infection but involves antibiotics, IV fluids and oxygen, if necessary.

Source: UK Sepsis Trust and NHS Choices

But the early symptoms of sepsis can be easily confused with more mild conditions, meaning it can be difficult to diagnose.

Sepsis can also lead to clots forming to block blood vessels, limiting the supply of vital nutrients and oxygen to the body’s limbs.

Starved of these resources tissue in the limbs can quickly die, leading to them needing to be amputated to avoid an infection spreading to other parts of the body. 

When the back pain first struck, Ms Kemp thought it was due to bending down to help put the screws into Hendrix’s toy kitchen.

She went to have a bath because she thought it would help.

But then, she told the Mirror: ‘half an hour later I was screaming in pain on the floor saying I felt like someone was squeezing my kidney.’ 

Ms Kemp was placed in a two-week coma at Peterborough City Hospital. 

Experts said sepsis patients are put in comas to protect vital organs from failure, and to avoid oxygen supplies becoming overstretched.

When she woke up, doctors said they may need to amputate both her arms and legs.

But Ms Kemp now says there is a chance her legs could be saved, whereas initially they were considering an amputation from below the knee.  

The remainder of her hands will be sewn into a pouch in her abdomen.

This technique is used to raise the chances of remaining tissue surviving, by increasing blood flow to the area. It has previously been used for war veterans returning from Afghanistan who suffered serious injury. 

Ms Kemp, who is divorced, said she has now lost her home because of sepsis.

She and her two sons were living in a house provided by a charity, but they must now move out because she is disabled. 

Her job with NHS Test and Trace has also ended, Ms Kemp says, because her condition has left her unable to drive all over the country for contact tracing. 

Ms Kemp said: ‘I’m just trying to get my head around why this happened and how this happened.

‘It has left me without a job and a house.

‘I’m not earning money for my kids. They haven’t got a roof over their heads and that makes me feel terrible. I just want to be there for them and give them some security

‘I was going through a divorce before this which had already cost me £10,000.

‘I’d just met my new partner and I thought I was finally starting from scratch and getting somewhere and then sepsis hit.’

Two of her friends have set up a GoFundMe page to raise £20,000 to cover childcare costs while Ms Kemp remains in hospital. It has so far got £13,000 in donations.

But the friends say they will now need to set up a second £25,000 call for donations to fund prosthetic fingers for Ms Kemp.

They wrote yesterday on the call for donations: ‘Good afternoon everyone, just wanted to thank every one so so much for their kind donations.

‘Sadie is going to need as much help financially as she can to get the home adaptions and other help she needs to live an independent life as a young mother.’

Dr Ron Daniels, an intensive care doctor and director of the UK Sepsis Trust, said Ms Kemp was ‘enormously lucky’ to have survived.

‘With sepsis that develops that quickly and cause multi-organ failure to the extent that the supply of blood to digits and limbs is compromised, then survival rates are in the order of 30 per cent,’ he told MailOnline.

He added: ‘I think questions need to be asked as to whether the hospital assessed her adequately.

‘Were any blood tests taken, what was her physiology at that time?, and so forth.’

‘I do wonder whether during the pandemic attention on Covid has compromised our ability to reliably spot other conditions.

‘We have all quite understandably focused on Covid, but when someone comes in with a condition other than Covid it might be that they might not have received quite as much attention.’

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