View Full Version : some kind of f***ed up right here!


BrandyBlue
1-10-04, 11:39 AM
Woman's Skin Falls Off, Miraculously Lives
Doctors Call Yeargain Recovery A Miracle

UPDATED: 4:32 PM PST January 9, 2004

SAN DIEGO -- A young Ocean Beach woman survived a severe allergic reaction that had University of California, San Diego Regional Burn Center staff scrambling to save her life, 10News reported.

Video


Woman Lives To Tell Of Skin Sloughing





By all accounts, Sarah Yeargain, (pictured, left), shouldn't be alive. But she is and some are calling it a medical miracle.

Three weeks ago, the skin on Yeargain's body began sloughing off.

Dr. Daniel Lozano, from the UCSD Regional Burn Center, said, "She lost skin in her entire body. It's rather dramatic to really see this coming off in sheets."

Even the membrane covering her internal organs -- her eyes, mouth, and throat -- began peeling away.

"Once the skin starts to slough, there's no stopping it," Lozano said.

Yeargain said she did not know what was going on with her body.

"The cause was a rare reaction to this drug, Bactrim. It is a common antibiotic used by millions of people," Lozano explained. "What she has is a condition called TENS -- toxic epidermal necrosis -- which is an autoimmune reaction to a whole host of drugs."

Yeargain had just finished the 10-day course of Bactrim for a sinus infection when the allergic reaction began.

"I started to get some minor swelling and discoloration in my face and it progressed into blistering on lips and swelling on my eyes. It then progressed into blisters all over my face and chest and arms," Yeargain said.

Within two days, the skin on her entire body was peeling off. Doctors told Yeargain's mother, Katherine Yeargain, there was little hope for her.

"Generally with 100-percent sloughing there is a 100-percent mortality and he was optimistic. We just prayed," said Katherine Yeargain.

It was a race to save Yeargain.

Doctors covered Yeargain's entire body with an artificial skin called transcyte and gave her medications to stop the internal bleeding.

"We were able, over a 48-hour period, to cover her whole body with an artificial skin replacement that allowed this to start healing rapidly. Within about a week her skin was back," Lozano said.

"Everybody prayed and here she is," Katherine Yeargain said.

"I wasn't ready to be finished," Yeargain said.

Some, like veteran burn unit nurse Meredith Frank, called Yeargain's recovery a miracle.

"I think with the magnitude of the skin loss she had that there was a divine hand in her recovery," Frank said.

After good medicine and perhaps a miracle, Yeargain is prepared again for life.

"I'm ready to start healing and get back to it," Yeargain said.

Yeargain is home from the hospital, but she isn't about to forget the doctors and nurses who helped her survive impossible odds. She said she hopes her story will encourage people to donate money to the UCSD Burn Center.
Copyright 2004 by TheSanDiegoChannel.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

jen*
1-10-04, 02:48 PM
:eek: That's scary! I'm glad she's going to be alright, though. Whew!

Metalfan83
1-10-04, 05:19 PM
Daaaaaamn! :bigeek: Luck she's still alive!! That would scare the hell outta me! :eek:

Rhelawen
1-10-04, 05:24 PM
Even the membrane covering her internal organs -- her eyes, mouth, and throat -- began peeling away.

Jeebus. :bigeek: How the hell would you stop that from happening? Imagine how that would feel. :ill: She's a lucky lady to still be alive.

ValJ
1-10-04, 06:28 PM
OK, I'm never taking that shite again! :eek:

PG
1-10-04, 07:09 PM
OK, I'm never taking that shite again! :eek:

Neither am I! :eek:

Hey, it says in the article there is a picture of her on the left :confused: Do you have a link to that article? I wanna see her! :D

TJ
1-10-04, 07:32 PM
Neither am I! :eek:

Hey, it says in the article there is a picture of her on the left :confused: Do you have a link to that article? I wanna see her! :D
Here it is:

http://www.thesandiegochannel.com/health/2751809/detail.html

jen*
1-10-04, 11:29 PM
Thanks for that link, TJ. I watched the video. That is one amazing woman!!!

Tinajo
1-10-04, 11:30 PM
Wow! That's an amazing story! I bet it was so physically painful and scary to be told that your chance of dying is pretty much 100%.. from taking an antibiotic!!

What a great team of doctors!

DanAria
1-10-04, 11:37 PM
That sucks. Ugh, if that ever happened to me I dont know what the hell I would do.

Hopefully that wont ever have that happen to me.

XXX
1-11-04, 10:10 AM
Holy crap! That's UCSD! That's the school I go to :eek: I saw it on the news and did not pay attention to where this woman was hospitalized. Well, I dunno if the Burn Centre is near campus, but that's awesome they managed to save her life. I wonder how she's going to recuperate from this accident...

BrandyBlue
1-11-04, 10:34 AM
I would imagine that if her body doesn't reject the artificial skin, she will be fine, but it will take a long time. Since it was a reaction and not an actual disease (thank God it's not a permanent thing), as long as she remains hydrated and medicated for her pain, I think she will probably fully recover. I don't know with artificial skin, however, if she has to take anti-rejection drugs for the rest of her life :(

XXX
1-11-04, 10:44 AM
Oh yeah. It's not part of her body, so she will have to take anti-rejection drugs for it.

ValJ
1-11-04, 08:24 PM
Maybe the artificial skin will only be necessary until the antibiotic is completely out of her system? Once she stops having the reaction, shouldn't her skin start renewing itself?

BrandyBlue
1-11-04, 09:07 PM
I hope so. It sounds like it would, it's logical. I just hope this isn't something that's permanent

Slayergrrl
1-11-04, 11:26 PM
:yikes: that poor, poor woman!