Wednesday, August 21, 2024 -A grandmother of thirteen was forced to have both her legs amputated after she was bit by a mosquito in her garden.
Josie Rowley, 69, was in her garden tending
to her plants in September last year when she says the insect bit her on her
left leg.
Rowley, from Bantry Bay, Cork,
Ireland, noticed two red marks on her leg when getting ready for bed but didn't
think much about the 'mosquito bite'-sized punctures. But days later the bite
marks turned into 'gruesome' ulcers.
After two drug takes of antibiotics that
were unsuccessful, she was referred to the hospital where she was given
compression bands and tried three rounds of leech therapy to tackle the
infection.
The compression wraps slowed down her
circulation so much that her toes turned black, forcing doctors to amputate
both legs above the knee.
Ms Rowley was left devastated by the incident and was shocked something as small as an insect bite had caused this much damage.
'I'm not too
sure what bit me because it was only when I was getting ready for bed that I
noticed two little round red marks on my lower left leg,' she said.
'I just
thought maybe an ant had crawled up my jeans or some creature.
'The next
day they had got a lot bigger and over days they became sore and then turned
into these gruesome ulcers and that is when I had the compression bandages put
on.
'The bites
at first were not even a millimetre, they were like a little mosquito bite.'
However, after a nurse put compression
bandages on her, circulation was not sufficient enough to heal the wounds and
her toes started to go black.
'Their [the
hospital] resolution was to amputate above the knee and this is what happened
in the end,' Ms Rowley said.
'We did try other alternatives [before then] and even tried leech therapy, which wasn't the most pleasant.
'I was
devastated because surely this hasn't all come about from a couple of insect
bites? It was crazy, I've been gardening for years and years.
'I did have
an underlying health condition of arthritis which didn't help either in my
hands and ankles.
'When I lost my first leg I was so calm
when I came out of the theatre but 10 days later they removed the other leg.
'With one amputation you can still
manoeuvre a little bit but when they took off the other leg that was a
different story.
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