ATLANTA
- A Georgia college student who has
already lost a leg to a rare, flesh-eating bacterial infection is now expected
to suffer the loss of her fingers too, her father said.
Aimee
Copeland, 24, was kayaking and zip-lining along the Little Tallapoosa River near
Carrollton, Georgia, on May 1 when the line broke and she sustained a cut to
her calf.
Emergency
room doctors closed the wound with 22 staples and released the woman, a
graduate student at West Georgia University, her father wrote in a post on
Facebook.
The
next day, Copeland complained of severe pain and returned to the emergency room
where she was given a prescription pain killer. The pain continued and the
following day she went to a doctor who gave her a prescription for antibiotics.
The doctor also ordered a magnetic resonance imaging test which was negative,
her father said.
On May
4, Copeland was pale and weak and went to a hospital where doctors diagnosed
her with necrotizing fasciitis, a rare flesh-eating bacterial infection.
Copeland,
who already suffered the amputation of a leg at the hip, was still listed in
critical condition on Sunday, said Barclay Bishop, spokeswoman for Doctor's
Hospital in Augusta.
She
would not provide any other details, but Aimee's father, Andy Copeland, said in
a web posting over the weekend that her fingers were also likely to be lost to
the infection ravaging her body.
He said
she may retain the use of her palms after surgery, however, something that
would potentially leave her with enough muscle control to use prosthetics.
Doctors
are "awaiting a safe time" before conducting further surgery, the
father wrote.
Necrotizing
fasciitis is often initially overlooked by doctors because it invades tissue
deep inside the wound while the outer wound appears to be healing normally, Dr.
William Schaffner of the Vanderbilt University Medical School said.
"This
often is a very subtle infection initially," Schaffner said. "These
bacteria lodge in the deeper layers of the wound. The organism is deep in the
tissues and that's where it's causing its mischief."
Reuters
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