Posted on Mar 19, 2017
A father went to the hospital with stomach pain. He left without his hands and feet.
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CW3 Dylan E. Raymond, PHR that is sad to hear:
Doctors would soon discover that something was very wrong with Breen.
He had contracted strep throat; not a typical strain of the virus but a fantastically rare version that would come close to killing him — eventually claiming his hands and his feet.
A GoFundMe page that aims to help the family has raised nearly $100,000 in less than three weeks. The money will be used to cover medical costs and efforts to help Breen adapt to life without appendages.
When he first arrived at the hospital, doctors had no idea what was truly ailing him. About 24 hours after he was admitted, doctors looked at the results of a CT scan and rushed Breen into exploratory surgery after deciding he may have ruptured his ulcer.
What they discovered shocked and further confused them.
“They opened him up and found 1½ liters of infected pus in his abdominal region,” Julie Breen said.
“We met with the surgeon after surgery and she sat us down and said, 'I've never seen this before and I don't like it,'” Julie Breen added. “'I don't know what it is.'”
The physician, Elizabeth Steensma, an acute care surgeon at Spectrum Health Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids, said infections of the abdomen are rare — and any time doctors find that much material in someone's abdomen, it's usually the result of a punctured organ.
However, doctors couldn't find any holes, leaving them at a loss for explaining the buildup of pus, Steensma said.
Doctors sent a sample of the material to a microbiology lab for testing. Around the same time, they began to notice a bright red rash on Breen's torso.
A final clue to his mysterious ailment arrived when Steensma discovered that Breen's son had recently caught strep throat.
After a culture came back positive for strep, Steensma was able to confirm that Breen had contracted the infection. She said doctors determined that the strep had traveled from Breen's throat to his stomach. The journey was so unusual, she said, that it had happened in only 32 other cases, most of them involving female patients.
Breen's strain of strep, she noted, was particularly strong, and his body was unable to defend itself.
“It's estimated that there are over 1 million cases per year, and this is only the second case that has ever been reported of strep traveling from a male patient's throat to his stomach,” Steensma said.
Doctors would soon discover that something was very wrong with Breen.
He had contracted strep throat; not a typical strain of the virus but a fantastically rare version that would come close to killing him — eventually claiming his hands and his feet.
A GoFundMe page that aims to help the family has raised nearly $100,000 in less than three weeks. The money will be used to cover medical costs and efforts to help Breen adapt to life without appendages.
When he first arrived at the hospital, doctors had no idea what was truly ailing him. About 24 hours after he was admitted, doctors looked at the results of a CT scan and rushed Breen into exploratory surgery after deciding he may have ruptured his ulcer.
What they discovered shocked and further confused them.
“They opened him up and found 1½ liters of infected pus in his abdominal region,” Julie Breen said.
“We met with the surgeon after surgery and she sat us down and said, 'I've never seen this before and I don't like it,'” Julie Breen added. “'I don't know what it is.'”
The physician, Elizabeth Steensma, an acute care surgeon at Spectrum Health Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids, said infections of the abdomen are rare — and any time doctors find that much material in someone's abdomen, it's usually the result of a punctured organ.
However, doctors couldn't find any holes, leaving them at a loss for explaining the buildup of pus, Steensma said.
Doctors sent a sample of the material to a microbiology lab for testing. Around the same time, they began to notice a bright red rash on Breen's torso.
A final clue to his mysterious ailment arrived when Steensma discovered that Breen's son had recently caught strep throat.
After a culture came back positive for strep, Steensma was able to confirm that Breen had contracted the infection. She said doctors determined that the strep had traveled from Breen's throat to his stomach. The journey was so unusual, she said, that it had happened in only 32 other cases, most of them involving female patients.
Breen's strain of strep, she noted, was particularly strong, and his body was unable to defend itself.
“It's estimated that there are over 1 million cases per year, and this is only the second case that has ever been reported of strep traveling from a male patient's throat to his stomach,” Steensma said.
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