FRIDAY, Sept. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Carl Buher came home from the
football game feeling rotten.
A strong, healthy, 14-year-old high school freshman, Carl had attended
a day's worth of school and then played in the game, but it felt as if he
were coming down with the flu. That made sense: A lot of his teammates had
recently had the flu, and he figured they'd just passed it on to him.
So he came home, ate, did his homework and went to bed, recalled Carl's
mother, Lori Buher of La Conner, Wash.
When she woke him up in the morning, Carl told her he'd been up all
night vomiting. "We figured he had the flu, so he stayed home from
school," Buher said.
The first sign that Carl might be sicker than they thought came in the
form of purple bruises that began to form, first on his face and then down
his arms and legs. By 2 p.m., Buher took her son to the doctor, concerned
for his health.
The doctor diagnosed Carl quickly and, as it turned out, accurately:
The teen had contracted meningococcal meningitis.
The diagnosis took Buher by surprise. "He had none of the symptoms you
hear about," she said. "No stiff neck. No terrible headache. No high
fever."
The family physician sent Carl to the local hospital's emergency room.
Within hours he was being airlifted to Seattle Children's Hospital.
"His heart stopped twice on the helicopter," Buher said. "They had to
revive him."
This was in 2003, and Buher knew about meningitis and knew that a
vaccine was available to prevent it. But at the time, the vaccine --
Menomune -- wasn't recommended for kids Carl's age. Teens headed for
college were supposed to get the vaccine, but even that was a shaky
proposition. Buher's two college-age kids were on a waiting list for
Menomune vaccination but hadn't received it yet because supplies were
short.
Now her son Carl was incredibly sick with the disease. She and her
husband hurriedly made the hour's drive to Seattle. "When we got there,
they had a social worker waiting to help us prepare for his death," she
remembers. "It was so overwhelming."
Doctors put Carl in a drug-induced coma, in which he lingered for five
weeks. His mother recalls that he was given more than 25 different
medications to keep his body functioning.
Nonetheless, meningitis ravaged Carl's body. He had to have both legs
amputated below the knee, and he also lost three fingers. The purple
bruising turned out to be his skin dying, which led to gangrene. Carl
endured skin grafts all over his body, 13 in all, and still bears the
scars. His weight fell from 185 to 119 pounds.
But Carl is 21 now and a junior at Gonzaga University in Spokane,
Wash., majoring in civil engineering. He graduated from high school as
class valedictorian in 2007.
"He had just started walking on his prosthetics by then because it took
the skin so long to heal," Buher said. His doctors and parents declared
him fully healed in 2008 -- five years after he first fell ill.
"He's very strong," Buher said of her son these days. "He's still not
nimble with the prosthetics, but he can do what he wants to do."
Buher said it breaks her heart that all of this might have been
prevented, and she urges parents to get their kids vaccinated.
"It's just so sad," she said. "Kids die, or they are left with these
terrible, disfiguring amputations. For us, we were able to survive this.
For so many families, their children die -- and it's just
unnecessary."
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