A toddler facing death after being ravaged by a flesh-eating bug was told by his heart- broken mother that he could ‘go’ if he wanted to.
Lucy Dove gently whispered the words into 18-month-old Frankie Mould’s ear because she couldn’t bear to see him suffer any more.
Her son had been through a nine-and-a-half hour operation to remove skin and tissue from his back and thigh, but doctors did not think he would survive the night and had told his parents to hope for a miracle.
Although the odds were stacked against him, Frankie showed extraordinary resilience to battle back from the brink – and is now home from hospital after six weeks of treatment.
‘He is doing well at the moment and we are so happy that he is alive,’ said Miss Dove from Sunderland.
Frankie is thought to have got the necrotising fasciitis bug from a graze to his forehead a few weeks earlier.
Bacteria got into his body, lay dormant and then ran wild.
At one point a nurse told Miss Dove, 25, and the boy’s father Wayne Mould, also 25, that he was ‘the sickest boy in the country’.
Frankie was put in a drug-induced coma for 12 days to help his body fight for life.
He had a second operation lasting five hours to remove more infected tissue and then had skin graft surgery to repair the terrible damage caused by the bug.
Skin was taken from his legs and trunk and stretched across his back and damaged thigh.
The terrifying bug was stopped just in time and the prompt treatment at Newcastle’s Royal Victoria Infirmary has been a success.
The family’s ordeal began on April 8 when Frankie developed flu-like symptoms and behaved ‘strangely’ as if he was in agony.
His mother took him to the local casualty unit and noticed a lump on his back – the first outward sign of the bug that was attacking his tissue below the surface.
Frankie was transferred to the RVI where he had the first marathon operation to cut out the infected areas and was then put into the intensive care unit.
Miss Dove, a mother of two, said: ‘They were saying they needed a miracle and having to take it minute by minute.
‘Being a mum you have to put your children first, and I thought, “is it selfish of me to want him to get through this, because of the damage to his body?” We were told bad things all the time so I whispered in his ear, “Frankie, if you want to go, you go.” But he didn’t want to go and stayed stable throughout. He is so tough.’
Peter Hodgkinson, consultant plastic surgeon in charge of his treatment, said the skin grafts ‘were healing beautifully’.
The skin is swathed in bandages but Frankie is full of energy, although he will need treatment until he is grown.
Miss Dove and Mr Mould, who works for a car dealership, are just grateful to the doctors.
‘The infection was spreading at a frightening rate,’ said Miss Dove. ‘I’m convinced their speedy action saved his life.’
There are 500 cases of necrotising fasciitis a year in the UK.
Source: Daily mail
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