She might be missing a chunk of her right thumb, but a Tennessee woman is lucky that she didn’t lose her arm after contracting a flesh-eating bacterial infection when she had a manicure and got a little nick.
She believes the infection took hold in a cut she picked up at a Knoxville nail bar.
“While I was there I got stuck on my thumb and I went ‘ouch’ but I went back to looking at my telephone,” said Sharp.
Later that day, her thumb started throbbing, she felt sick and thought she had come down with the flu.
When a flu test came back negative, the nurse told her to keep an eye on the swelling.
Sharp went home and fell asleep. When she was woken by a call from the nurse, she found the swelling had reached her arm.
She was rushed to the hospital, and diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis.
Her doctor, Dr. Udit Chaudhuri, told WBIR that the nurse’s quick actions and suspicions had potentially saved Sharp’s life.
“She could have lost her finger or her arm if she hadn’t been diagnosed properly,” said Chaudhuri.
Sharp said that she never imagined that a cut during a manicure could cause the disease.
“I had never heard of such a thing when they told me flesh-eating bacteria,” she said.
Sharp is diabetic, meaning she is more susceptible to the disease.
The nail salon said that they follow state regulations on cleaning tools and that they passed an inspection days after Sharp reported the issue.
Various cases of flesh-eating bacteria have been reported in United States over the last couple of months.
The family had braced for him to emerge from the infection with hands and feet amputated if he had survived.
Like Sharp he was diabetic.
Five days later, after he took a turn for the worse, they rushed him to hospital, she said.
1 in 3 Cases Result in Death
The condition can be caused by several different types of bacteria, and is often known by the medical term “necrotizing fasciitis.”“Fasciitis means inflammation of the fascia (the tissue under the skin that surrounds muscles, nerves, fat, and blood vessels),” the agency says on its website.
Once an infection takes hold, it can develop and spread rapidly, killing tissue as it grows.
According to the CDC, early symptoms of the condition include a red or swollen area of skin that spreads quickly, severe pain, including pain beyond the area of the skin that is red, and a fever.
Although these symptoms can also be caused by minor illnesses, the CDC warns to err on the sided of caution. “See a doctor right away if you have these symptoms after an injury or surgery.”
“Later symptoms of necrotizing fasciitis can include: Ulcers, blisters, or black spots on the skin … changes in the color of the skin … pus or oozing from the infected area,” the agency says.
Dizziness, fatigue, diarrhea, and nausea are also symptoms.
“Even with treatment, up to 1 in 3 people with necrotizing fasciitis die from the infection,” according to the CDC website. Fortunately, the condition is not infectious and very rarely can be passed on through contact.