The Columbus Dispatch

Man’s limbs amputated after lick by dog

- By Ivan Moreno

MILWAUKEE — A Wisconsin man was preparing for additional surgeries after having part of his legs and forearms amputated because of a dog lick that led to a rare blood infection, his wife said Thursday.

Greg Manteufel, 48, has been hospitaliz­ed since late June, when he went to a Milwaukee- area hospital with flu- like symptoms. He has been in good spirits since, despite having undergone seven surgeries, his wife, Dawn Manteufel, told The Associated Press.

She said her husband was heading into an operating room again Thursday and still would have three more surgeries to go, but he was looking forward to being fitted for prosthetic limbs.

“He’s happy to be here. He said he didn’t come this far to cry about it and say, ‘Why me?’” she said.

Her husband was diagnosed with a blood infection caused by capnocytop­haga — bacteria common in the saliva of cats and dogs but almost Greg Manteufel awaits yet another surgery in Froedtert & Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee on Thursday. never leads to illness, said Dr. Silvia Munoz- Price, an epidemiolo­gist with Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin, where Manteufel is being treated.

The doctor said people are more likely to die in a car accident than be infected by the bacteria.

“It’s extremely rare. Do

not get rid of your pets. Continue behaving the same way that you have behaved with your pets up until now,” Munoz-Price said.

Dawn Manteufel said her husband’s symptoms began on June 26: a fever and pain in his legs. But then he started experienci­ng delirium, and bruises and blemishes developed during the short car ride to a hospital in West Bend, Wisconsin, where he was treated initially, she said.

The infection caused Greg Manteufel’s blood pressure to drop and circulatio­n in his limbs to rapidly decrease, which in itself isn’t unusual for blood infections, Munoz- Price said. The infection was quickly cleared with antibiotic­s, but the problem in Manteufel’s case “was that his body mounted an overwhelmi­ng response to this original blood infection, and he shut down the circulatio­n of his limbs,” the doctor said.

Doctors first amputated Manteufel’s legs, just below the knee. His forearms were amputated two weeks later, his wife said.

The tip of her husband’s nose also lost blood circulatio­n and will need surgery to repair, she said.

It’s unknown which dog gave Manteufel the infection. He and his wife have an 8- year- old pit bull, but she said her husband came in contact with several dogs in the days before his infection, including a stray he encountere­d while working as a house painter.

According to the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as many as 74 percent of dogs and 57 percent of cats have capnocytop­haga. People also have a different strain of the same bacteria in their mouths, Munoz-Price said.

“We have trillions of bacteria in our bodies. Usually those bacteria live happily with us. Sometimes they act up,” she said.

The CDC doesn’t track the number of infections from capnocytop­haga.

Dawn Manteufel said that once her husband is released from the hospital, he will move temporaril­y into his parents’ one-story home because it will be easier for him to navigate.

Eventually, she said, she and her husband will have to sell the two- story house they have lived in for 18 years and move.

“His words are, ‘ It is what it is,’” Dawn Manteufel said.

A relative has set up a GoFundMe page for the Manteufels.

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