Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
Ranger recalls hyena attack
A WILDLIFE ranger recounted his neardeath experience after a hyena attacked him on a game farm in Musina.
An unsuspecting Frans Ndlovu was lying on the cool floor with his door open to catch the evening breeze after a 40°C day spent guarding the wildlife against poachers on a Musina game farm last November.
“It was very, very scary, but I am alive,” Mr Ndlovu, a father of two, said of the night he narrowly survived an encounter in the dark with a brazen hyena.
“I was sleeping soundly, and it was a huge shock being attacked in the dark. The animal had my head in its jaws; it was so powerful, and I could feel its teeth in my eye… ”
Remarkably, through the pain and shock of the experience, Ndlovu managed to catch hold of a nearby pole as he was being dragged towards the bushes, and he held on with all his strength while screaming for help.
“The people staying in the neighbouring rooms came out to help me, and they fought the hyena off.”
Bleeding profusely from his head and shoulder, Mr Ndlovu was rushed to a local hospital, where doctors initially stabilised him before he was transferred by helicopter to the emergency department at Netcare Pholoso Hospital in Polokwane.
Dr Vusi Khosa, who has worked in emergency medicine since 2013, said time was critical for Ndlovu’s massive injuries.
“It was a life-threatening situation, and the treatment required was complex. On his face, part of the facial muscles were torn away, and the bone was splintered from the crushing fracture due to the force of the hyena’s bite,” said Dr Khosa.
The spotted hyena has one of the strongest bites of all carnivorous mammals, measuring approximately 1 100-pound force per square inch (that is, 77.3kg per square centimetre), according to BBC Science Focus.
“A CT scan revealed the full extent of his injuries, and it was fortunate that the doctors who initially treated him in Musina recognised the need for multidisciplinary expertise and referred Ndlovu to the level II trauma centre here at Netcare Pholoso Hospital.”
Trauma Society of South Africa (TSSA) accreditation of the facility certifies that it has the necessary medical expertise and systems aligned with international best practice in trauma medicine to provide 24-hour emergency care.
It was shortly before 6am that Ndlovu arrived at the hospital by medical helicopter transfer and the trauma team was activated.
“In line with established trauma protocols, emergency surgery addressed the most time-critical aspects and the wounds were cleaned and flushed, and we started antibiotics because animal bites can go septic easily and progress to septic shock, which can be fatal,” Dr Khosa said.
After the traumatic injury he had sustained, Mr. Ndlovu needed quite extensive facial reconstruction.
“This experience has not changed my belief that wildlife should be protected. These animals are part of nature and provide the livelihood to support my children,” a thankful Mr Ndlovu said.