Medicine Hat News

Strep throat bug also causes flesh-eating disease, but why is a ‘random game’: expert

- BRENNA OWEN

An infectious disease physician says that when someone is infected with group A streptococ­cus bacteria, it’s “kind of a random game” what comes next.

Dr. Donald Vinh says it could turn into the type of illness known as strep throat.

But in rare cases, it could result in the rare flesh-eating disease necrotizin­g fasciitis that recently claimed the leg of a firefighte­r from Vancouver.

Vinh with the McGill University Health Centre says necrotizin­g fasciitis is among the “scariest” infectious diseases he’s ever seen, one of the “classic bugs” that every medical profession­al is taught to watch for because it can kill within hours.

The tissue-killing infection can spread quickly, he says, even if the patient receives antibiotic­s or surgical treatment to remove the dead tissue or limb.

“Despite optimal therapy, the mortality rate for this beast is alarmingly high.”

Vinh says people can carry the “strep A” bacteria on their skin or in their nose and throat without getting sick, or they may develop strep throat.

Yet for others, the bacteria can lead to “invasive” infections, including necrotizin­g fasciitis and streptococ­cal toxic shock syndrome, he says.

Vinh says it’s not clear why there is such wide variabilit­y.

“Somewhere along the way from exposure to, in a small proportion of people, severe disease, there’s something that occurs that we don’t understand,” he says.

The person obviously has to have picked up strep A somewhere, he says.

“We don’t know whether it gets on your skin or in your airways — before you get these severe diseases like necrotizin­g fasciitis.

“But that’s the big black box.” The infection can start in a minor cut or scrape, or follow a chickenpox infection, Vinh says. But sometimes there is no obvious wound or injury to the skin.

That was the case for Christophe­r Won, an assistant fire chief with Vancouver Fire Rescue Services who is recovering in a Hong Kong hospital after a bout with the infection forced the amputation of one of his legs above the knee on Feb. 15.

Won’s partner, Marie Hui, says the family can’t recall Won having any wounds or insect bites when he began feeling the symptoms during a family vacation.

Hui says Won is “lucky to be alive, and very grateful for another day,” as the couple and their two children wait for Won to be cleared to fly home to Vancouver.

Vinh says one of the earliest signs of necrotizin­g fasciitis is a limb that is painful to a degree that’s disproport­ionately worse than any visual signs, such as redness.

In that way, the fast-moving infection can be “deceptivel­y visually benign,” he says.

Sometimes, in the absence of any alarming visual cues, people mistake the pain for a muscle strain and delay seeking medical attention until it’s too late, he adds.

There’s no vaccine against “group A strep,” and infections caused by the bacteria are rising in Canada and around the world, Vinh says. But a course of penicillin is usually enough to knock down the more superficia­l skin or strep throat infections.

Vinh is encouragin­g anyone sick with strep throat to seek medical attention for antibiotic­s in order to treat the infection while decreasing the risk of transmitti­ng it.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? The McGill University Health Centre super-hospital main entrance is seen in this November 2014 file photo in Montreal. An infectious disease physician says it’s “kind of a random game” whether someone infected with group A streptococ­cus bacteria will develop a rare flesh-killing disease that recently claimed the leg of a firefighte­r from Vancouver.
CP FILE PHOTO The McGill University Health Centre super-hospital main entrance is seen in this November 2014 file photo in Montreal. An infectious disease physician says it’s “kind of a random game” whether someone infected with group A streptococ­cus bacteria will develop a rare flesh-killing disease that recently claimed the leg of a firefighte­r from Vancouver.

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