"My skin, hair and nails fell off after I was bitten by mosquito in Caribbean"

  • 3 months ago
A woman had a holiday from hell after her skin peeled off and her hair and nails fell off when she was bitten by a tiger mosquito in the Caribbean.

Amy Wells, 37, got a huge rash over her whole body after the bite and was treated with antibiotics.

But they reacted with a medicine she was already taking and within days the skin all over her body blistered - leaving her looking like she'd been badly burned.

She had to take ten weeks off work and has been left with scars all over her lower legs.

Amy, from Ashford, Kent, who works in quality control, said: "It was hell on earth.

"The blisters covered my whole body - even my eyes and my lips.

"It was extremely painful. People kept asking me if I'd been in a fire.

"It's very odd. I've never had any kind of allergic reaction to anything."

Amy and now-husband Charlie, 27, who works in security, travelled to the Dominican Republic on January 22 2023 and got engaged four days later on her birthday.

After a day swimming with dolphins, on January 28, Amy woke with a rash on her neck, which quickly spread over her whole body.

Amy went to the island's hospital where she was given an antibiotic called ceftriaxone not commonly used in the UK, she says.

A language barrier meant they didn't talk about how she was taking amoxicillin for a tooth infection.

Amy stayed in hospital and was allowed to fly home on February 1 because the infection markers had dropped, but she had little blisters appearing on her body.

Her thighs swelled to twice their normal size during the ten-hour flight, and it felt like they were burning, she said.

She went to an urgent-care centre in Faversham, and was sent on to A&E at the William Harvey hospital in Ashford, Kent.

She said: "I knew something wasn't right. It felt like I was burning from the inside out.

"The blisters started popping while I was in A&E - fluid was pouring out of them. It was horrible."

Amy said she had to wait 56 hours in A&E before being given a bed in a corridor, then a ward, because the hospital was so full.

Doctors spotted puncture wounds on Amy's legs which they identified as mosquito bites, she said.

Amy believes she was bitten by tiger mosquitos, which carry dengue fever and Zika virus.

She thinks an infection from the bites caused the first rash.

Medics said the burning was caused by a rare reaction between the two antibiotics, she says.

After the blisters popped, her skin peeled off, but some skin stuck to her legs leaving open wounds which turned green after she was discharged.

"I was really frightened," she said.

Her legs took three weeks to heal, thanks to cream, and she now has scarring covering half of each leg below the knee.

Amy had to take ten weeks off work.

Amy's finger and toe nails fell out in April, and her hair started thinning, and by May she was totally bald -

A hair specialist explained This is due to shock.

She said: "Losing my hair was the hardest part - your hair really defines you.

"I looked in the mirror and I was like 'that's not me'."

Amy and Charlie got married on October 14.

Amy said: "After everything that had happened we decided not to hang about.

"You never expect that something like this can happen to you.

"It's such a rare illness and I was so healthy."

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Transcript
00:00My name is Amy Wells. I'm 37 and I'm from Ashford in Kent. I went on holiday January
00:112023 to the Dominican Republic for 10 days. I believe a tiger mosquito bit me. The initial
00:18rash that I developed started on my neck, made its way all the way down my body, across
00:26my arms. It looked like heat rash to start with. It then expanded to increase across
00:32my body. Although I was wearing mosquito repellent, I was still being bitten. We went to the hospital
00:38in the Dominican Republic and there was a language barrier. It was missed out that I'd
00:45been on amoxicillin for tooth infection. I was then given ceftriaxone, which is an antibiotic,
00:53and that then caused the reaction with the amoxicillin. I'd stopped taking the amoxicillin
00:58three days into the holiday, that's when it had ended, but it was still in my system.
01:02I flew home and when we landed, my skin was burning and my legs had started to swell.
01:10We went to Favresh Emergent Treatment Centre, who took one look at me and said, no, you've
01:16got to go to A&E. Within a couple of hours of being at A&E, the blisters had moved all
01:21the way down my arms, across my belly and across my chest at this point, and the rash
01:26had moved onto my legs. I have to say it was probably the scariest moment is when you realise
01:35that they don't know what it is, because it was so rare, it was so uncommon. I got asked
01:40if I'd been burnt, if I'd had acid thrown on me, and it was only when the junior doctors
01:46looked at my legs and could see the puncture wounds. That, with the medical history of
01:51the Dominican Republic, decided that actually it was an adverse reaction to a mosquito bite,
01:59was the initial cause of the rash, and then this ended up being a reaction to the medicines
02:04that they gave me on holiday as well. But it was pretty terrifying. So as with any blisters,
02:10they pop, I would be sitting there and suddenly you would feel liquid from the blisters running
02:16down your arms, because it was 100% of my body. There was so much liquid coming out,
02:20you start feeling dirty, is the only way I can describe it. My hands, they peeled as well. It
02:26was like a snake shedding, is how the skin came off. It was fresh baby skin underneath,
02:32and then the rest of the body followed suit and the face peeled as well. So my legs were
02:39a complication, but they developed open wounds underneath the skin, which then created an
02:45infection risk. So I was moved to an isolation room for a week whilst they started to heal.
02:51Unfortunately, they didn't heal fully. So when I was discharged, I still had skin attached to my
02:57legs. So I ended up having to have daily leg dressings. I started noticing that my hair was
03:02falling out. By May, I was going completely bald on top. Luckily, it has grown back. My
03:09nails and my toenails also fell off. Losing my hair was one of the hardest out of the whole
03:14illness, I think, because it is what identifies you. The hair grew back curly, very curly,
03:22and a completely different colour to what it was when I was little as well.
03:26So it's been a very, very long journey. Myself and my now husband, it was his first ever holiday
03:32abroad. He has been my rock and my support throughout the whole of this. Honestly,
03:40I wouldn't be the person I am today and as resilient as I am today without him and his
03:45support throughout all of this. So much so that we decided to bring forward the wedding,
03:50and we got married in October last year. So my advice is definitely have travel insurance.
03:57Our bill came to over £5,000 for the two nights, and we wouldn't have been able to afford it
04:01without the travel insurance. Always wear mosquito repellent day and night. Make sure that you are
04:08open and honest with any of the antibiotics, any of the pain relief that you're taking.
04:14Whatever life throws at you, you can deal with, as long as you've got the support of those around
04:20you. Your hair doesn't define you as a person, as much as I felt that it did. It doesn't define
04:26you as a person. My reaction was one in a million, so it won't happen to everybody,
04:31but if it does, just know that there is support out there for you.

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