Northern General Sheffield: Woman 'lucky to be alive' after picking up horrific flesh eating bug gardening

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Louise Fawcett says she is ‘lucky to be alive’ after catching a horrific flesh eating bug garden at home.

Louise is currently receiving treatment from the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield, after picking up the shocking bug, which she thinks came from a small cut.

Louise aged 58, was pottering in the garden outside her home in slip on sandals when she thinks she got a small cut on her right foot from rubble.

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Her foot swelled up and after days of agony and tests she was diagnosed with necrotising fasciitis.

Surgeons fought to cut away the bug by removing the infected tissue - and Louise has no memory of her three days in intensive care.

Louise Fawcett  feels "lucky to be alive" after she caught a flesh eating bug from her flower beds. Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNSLouise Fawcett  feels "lucky to be alive" after she caught a flesh eating bug from her flower beds. Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNS
Louise Fawcett feels "lucky to be alive" after she caught a flesh eating bug from her flower beds. Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNS | Louise Fawcett / SWNS

Seven operations later - including a skin graft from her thigh - and after weeks in hospital she was finally allowed home and is learning to walk again.

She suspects she caught the bug from soil in her garden which got into her blood stream through a tiny cut she got on her foot.

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Louise, a vision rehabilitation officer, from Chesterfield, said: "I must have got a tiny cut. I think I caught it from the soil.

"Mark, my husband, has been busy with our garden. It's full of rubble.

"I'm unlucky to get it but lucky to be alive.

"I can't believe it happened somewhere so suburban as Chesterfield."

Louise didn't notice anything was wrong with her foot until the following day on April 21, 2024.

She said: "It was swollen quite a bit.

"I started to feel pretty unwell.

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"I couldn't wear shoes for dinner for Mark's birthday. I couldn't put any weight on it."

Louise Fawcett's exposed ankle in hospital.  Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNS
Louise Fawcett's exposed ankle in hospital.  Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNS
Louise Fawcett's exposed ankle in hospital. Photo: Louise Fawcett / SWNS | Louise Fawcett / SWNS

She continued to feel unwell over the weekend and went to see her GP but was told it was likely cellulitis - a potentially serious infection - and was prescribed antibiotics.

She was told to keep her foot elevated and to come back if her symptoms continued.

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Louise said: "The next morning I noticed the ankle looked like it had a port wine birthmark. It was very purple.

"I thought it was sepsis."

Mark, 59, a train driver, took Louise to Chesterfield Royal Hospital where she had some blood tests.

While waiting for the results a nurse spotted her and realised her symptoms looked like the rare flesh eating bug she had been studying just the week before.

Louise said: "They took me into a little room.

"The redness was creeping. It was changing before their eyes.

They thought I might lose my life or my leg

Louise Fawcett

"They thought I might lose my life or my leg."

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Louise was taken to surgery immediately to open her foot up and cut away at the flesh eating bug.

She was then taken to intensive care for three days - but has no memory of this.

She had a six operations to cut away at the bug before they were able to stabilise Louise.

She spent a further three weeks in hospital and had a skin graft - where they took skin from her thigh - at the Northern General Hospital, Sheffield in May.

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Louise was discharged on May 16, 2024 and was told last week her skin graft was successful and has now started physio.

She has a pair of crutches to aid her walking.

She said: "They told me it healed. I was crying with joy.

"I'm here. I'm glad to be alive."

Louise has a brace to support her ankle when she sits so it stays at 90 degrees.

She said: "I have to bathe my foot.

"I can't look at it. It doesn't feel like my foot.

"It feels like a mannequins foot."

Louise had to postpone the launch of her business Sight Loss Solutions because of her ordeal - and is now opening her practice on June 16, 2024.

She hopes to hold individual and group session and also support the carers of people who have experienced sight loss.

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