The reason I have posted this today is a warning to please take care of your skin especially blisters. Now I know you may think sepsis from a blister is rare but it is not as rare that it is unlikely to happen to you. I have experienced something similar myself, in my case it was a little crack in the dry skin of my foot and the infection spread from my heel to my thigh in a matter of hours and by that time I was very poorly. I've also come across a couple of students whom I was teaching, and noticed severe inflammation around a broken blister and advised them to visit their doctor straight away, both of whom were very glad I dismissed them from class to do so.
All too often we neglect our poor feet, they work so hard for us so they do deserve the care you spend on your face.
STORY FROM THE DAILY MAIL BELOW
Schoolboy, 12, six hours from death after blister on his feet becomes infected and sends him into toxic shock - all because he was wearing shoes with no socks
- Macenzie Campbell was rushed to hospital as his body began to shut down
- His mother thought sore was verruca but next day his temperature soared
- He was just hours from death when he rung relatives to say his goodbyes
- After operation on his foot to remove infected tissue he is now recovering
Macenzie Campbell almost died after a blister on his foot became infected and sent him into toxic shock
A 12-year-old boy was six hours from death when a blister on his foot became infected and sent him into toxic shock after he wore shoes without socks.
Family members prepared to say goodbye to Macenzie Campbell after his organs began to fail and his body shut down.
His mother Joanne, 38, thought the potentially fatal infection started from a verruca and had applied a treatment, but the next day his foot had swollen and a red rash spread all over his body.
She rushed him to a doctor, as his temperature soared, and he was immediately admitted to the Royal Bolton Hospital.
Staff warned him he may not survive and he phoned family members to say his goodbyes after the rash began turning black and his organs started shutting down.
The schoolboy said: ‘It was terrifying. I wasn’t only scared for myself, I was scared for my family. It had seemed like a normal blister, but I gradually started to feel worse and worse.
‘I felt sick, everything was blurry and my heart was racing. I didn’t know what was going on.’
His grandmother, Kate Campbell, said: ‘We thought we were going to lose him. He was ringing all of us in case he didn’t make it.
‘We were told afterwards he was only a few hours from death. The sepsis was gradually shutting his body down. We were distraught.’
HOW TO TREAT BURST BLISTERS
- Do not peel off the dead skin on top of the blister - allow the fluid inside to drain and then cover the blister and the area around it with a dry, sterile dressing to protect it from infection until it heals.
- If the top layer of dead skin has already rubbed off, do not pick at the edges of the remaining skin.
- If the blister is on your foot, avoid wearing the shoes that caused it until it heals.
It is believed the blister actually appeared on his right ankle after he wore shoes without socks on in April and later burst.
His foot was operated on to remove the infected tissue and he was kept in hospital for just over a week.
Mrs Campell told The Sun: ‘Doctors said six to 12 hours later, he’d have been dead’.
Macenzie is now recovering at home.
Joanne Campbell thought the sore was a verruca at first and applied treatment but by the next day his foot had swollen, his temperature soared and he was covered in a red rash as toxic shock syndrome set in
Macenzie Campbell with his grandmother Kate who was was terrified she was going to loose her grandson
Astrid Brown (Author)
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