Girl Nearly Dies From Rare Illness Caused By Flesh-Eating Bacteria

Girl smiling in hospital bed following a rare flesh-eating bacteria illness.

An 18-month-old girl almost died after suffering a rare illness that triggered a flesh-eating bacteria to attack her lungs which she may have contracted on the plane on the way to�Thailand.

Amarli Marshall, from West Australia, was diagnosed with�Streptococcus Necrotising Pneumonia -�a life-threatening condition of bacterial lung infection after she travelled with her parents,�Sharna and Brendan Marshall and four-year-old sister Kensi on a family holiday to Thailand on June 26.

However, their 10-day trip became a six-week ordeal at an�emergency ward at a Bangkok hospital after Amarli fell seriously�ill.

Girl in stroller with face mask and plush toy, recovering from flesh-eating bacteria illness.

Her parents thought at first that she�caught a cold, while doctors were baffled by the severe infection that caused her to lose red and white blood cells.�”She had a team of doctors working on her; a lung doctor, a kidney doctor, a surgeon, a blood doctor, and an infectious disease specialist, so she had a team of people trying to determine what was wrong,” Mrs Marshall told Colliemail.

Day by day, Amarli’s health deteriorated�as a�flesh-eating bacteria already attacked her lungs, so doctors had to remove part of her lower left lung to prevent�the severe infection from spreading. However, despite her condition,�Amarli was surprisingly deemed well enough to be discharged from hospital�on August 5.

“The doctors have been amazed at how sick she was, and they were really concerned that we would lose her, and then on the other side of that how quickly she has recovered,” Mrs Marshall said.

Girl in stroller with smiling man at airport check-in.

Mrs Marshall said that doctors told her Amarli’s lungs are functioning really well for someone who is missing part of a lung, and�there will not be any long term impacts on her health.

She�said doctors were unsure how Amarli contracted the disease but believed she may have caught it on board after her parents noticed she had a sniffle on the plane.

Amarli’s�illness left her family stranded in Thailand�for over a�month, but they have been given the all clear to fly back home to Perth on Tuesday.

While the travel insurance has helped with Amarli’s medical expenses, family and friends have also set up a GoFundMe page to help the Marshall family.

Source:�Dailymail.co.uk

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Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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