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New SC mom hospitalized with flesh-eating bacteria

May 17, 2012 RSS Feed Print

By MEG KINNARD, Associated Press

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Days after giving birth to twins, a South Carolina mother has been hospitalized for what doctors say is a rare flesh-eating infection.

The development follows the similar affliction of a Georgia graduate student, who lost her left leg and may lose her fingers. But experts say the South Carolina case, though serious, is less severe than the Georgia one and caused by a different bacterium.

Lana Kuykendall, 36, gave birth to healthy twins at an Atlanta hospital last week. When the new family of four returned to their home in Piedmont, the mother — who is also a paramedic — noticed a pain and rash on her left leg.

As the spot began to spread, Kuykendall went to a local hospital, where she has since undergone several surgeries but was improving Thursday.

"She's stable," Darren Kuykendall, the woman's husband, told The Associated Press in a phone interview from Greenville Memorial Hospital.

Friends and family are helping care for the couple's week-old twins, who are healthy. A fund has been set up to help with Kuykendall's care.

The condition is called necrotizing fasciitis, the same disorder that has Georgia graduate student Aimee Copeland fighting for her life in a hospital several hundred miles away. Doctors say Copeland, 24, has lost a leg and could lose all her fingers from the infection that spread days after she suffered a deep cut while zip-lining.

In that case, doctors have said Copeland has been infected by Aeromonas hydrophila, a flesh-eating bacterium that emits toxins that cut off blood flow to parts of the body, destroying muscle, fat and skin tissue. Flesh-eating Aeromonas cases are so rare that only a handful of infections have been reported in medical journals in recent decades.

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said the South Carolina woman's case has its root in Group A streptococcus. That's the same bacteria that can cause strep throat, of which millions of cases are reported annually in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But when it finds an area of the body that has recently undergone a trauma — like a cut or deep bruise, which Kuykendall may have experienced during the delivery of her twins — Group A strep can manifest itself into the flesh-eating disorder that has landed Kuykendall in the hospital, Schaffner said.

"It causes a lot of pain," Schaffner said. "It can evade diagnosis for a period of time."

According to the CDC, between 9,000 and 11,500 cases of invasive Group A strep happen each year in the United States, resulting in upward of 1,000 deaths.

Not contagious, the bacterium is best treated by antibiotics and surgeries to remove dead tissue, which Schaffner said can spread so rapidly that doctors must go in multiple times to cut out more areas.

Kuykendall, who has been keeping vigil at the hospital, said he knows his wife will improve but is sad she has missed time bonding with their babies.

"The sad part about it is that she hasn't gotten to see the babies for the first week of their lives," Kuykendall told WYFF-TV (http://bit.ly/KBkzMd). "I talk to her every day. I tell her how good she's doing, and how strong she is, and that she's a fighter. She can make it."

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Fund for Kuykendall's care: GHS Federal Credit Union, 864-455-7112

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Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Ms. Kinnard, excellent coverage of a heart breaking, and simultaneously disturbing situation that is still pending for some of these individuals and families.

Although this may seem unusual, I wanted to share information that might do well to be investigated on behalf of these courageous survivors and their families.

There is a facility known as The International Bio Care Hospital and Medical Center, and specifically, the Alivizatos Treatment Program, which utilizes a process that regenerates, enhances and modulates the immune system so that the body can withstand abnormal influences (web pages sited below).

I have learned of this via four combined personal testimonies from individuals in my own hometown, three of which have been cured of their respective cancers through this therapy, and the fourth currently preparing to attend for follow-up treatments. One was 17 years of age with a brain tumor - doctors elsewhere were unable to give anything but a 3-month terminal prognosis (my friend Samuel Hendon is now 34!)

No harmful side effects - an IV which distributes therapeutic levels of significant vitamins, minerals, amino acids and such that the body requires for combating disease and super-powering the immune response (alkalinizing the body) is the simple technique used by Alivizatos over a typical 23 day period of time.

Web sites to access for information regarding this treatment include:

www.alivizatos.com

http://www.biocarehospital.com/home.html

http://www.cancure.org/international_bio_care_hospital.htm

If any of this information is helpful to the readers of your column, I am thankful to have taken the time to submit this for review and consideration - be blessed!

I give God all commendation and credit for His amazing way of connecting people and information in order to allow us to experience just a small fraction of His unlimited compassion and love for us!

Perhaps God has led you to come across this information "for such a time as this?" (Esther 4:14, Bible): Bible reference appropriately provided by my friend Samuel Hendon, above-mentioned in the Alivizatos testimonial.

Thank you for the opportunity to submit a comment for your many readers. Also, I appreciate the informative and conscientious approach of your journalism.

Rebecca Kiel of NC 9:45PM May 21, 2012

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