Kim continues to recover from dangerous bout with TEN
January 6th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey
Kim Oake’s voice on the phone is strong. It is hard to believe she is the same woman I first wrote about less than a month ago. Then, she was in the hospital and fighting for her life. Seventy percent of her skin had blistered and peeled away, and she was put into a drug-induced coma to shield her from pain and help her fight infection.
Kim had suffered a severe adverse reaction to a common antibiotic she received after being bitten by a feral cat. She was diagnosed with toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), the most severe form of Stevens Johnson Syndrome (SJS).
“I knew something was wrong when I started taking the antibiotic,” Kim says. “I felt different immediately.” She had taken other antibiotics before and never had any problems. But this drug made her ill. Just days after beginning the antibiotic, she stopped the medication. But then her fever spiked and her head began pounding. Her body broke out in a rash.
Her condition continued to deteriorate. Kim was admitted to the hospital and received morphine for the pain. The doctors and nurses were baffled. It wasn’t until a wound specialist checked her that she was finally diagnosed with SJS/TEN.
Once diagnosed, doctors were able to treat her, but the struggle was only beginning. Kim was put into a drug-induced coma for 15 days. She remembers strange dreams, like wanting to fall into a deep sleep but her sister, Lisa, kept throwing pixie dust on her, keeping her from drifting off. “She may have saved my life,” she says with a laugh.
Kim was determined to overcome SJS/TEN, and miraculously, was able to go home before Christmas. She spent the day with her children. “I was just so glad to be home,” she says.
Kim began physiotherapy last week – impressing her physiologist with her strength and range of motion. Movement is hard, she says, because the new skin is taut and hurts when stretched. She knows recovery is a long road, but she looks forward to going back to work as an animal control officer.
“It’s been a wild ride,” she says. “I’m glad that part is over.”
![[ Beasley Allen Law Firm Logo ]](http://www.sjs-legal.com/wp-content/themes/system-unity/images/logo.png)