Horrified British woman, 27,
discovers that headaches and scratching sounds inside her head are FLESH-EATING
MAGGOTS after trip to Peru
Rochelle Harris was given a MRI scan to see if
the maggots had migrated to her brain, but luckily they had not got very
far. She said the wait for minor surgery to remove the maggots was the
longest few hours of her life
A woman
has spoken of her terror at discovering that she harboured flesh-eating maggots
inside her ear.
When Rochelle Harris, 27, from Derby, returned from the
holiday of a lifetime in Peru, she thought little of the headaches that she had
started to develop on the flight back to the UK.
But within hours she had developed excruciating shooting
pains down one side of her face and had started to hear strange scratching
sounds in her head. The next morning she woke to a pillow soaked with fluid
from her ear.
Rochelle (pictured with boyfriend James) said
she remembered walking through a swarm of flies when in Peru and a fly
did indeed get inside her ear. But once she shooed it away she thought
nothing more of it
On her arrival back in the UK,
Rochelle became increasingly concerned there may be something seriously wrong,
so she visited her local Accident and Emergency department at the Royal Derby
Hospital.
Initially doctors weren't concerned by her symptoms and presumed that
they had developed because of a minor ear infection or an infected mosquito
bite.
Here the the moment doctors found a 'writhing
mass of maggots' is captured. The tips of a maggot's head can be seen as
doctors try to extract the larvae from Rochelle's ear
She was referred to the ear nose and throat (ENT) team for
further investigation to rule out a more sinister problem, however.
Rochelle said that as her ear was being examined, the ENT
specialist went silent.
The doctor had found a small hole in the ear canal which
needed further investigation but would not explain what the problem was.
After almost an hour of silent examination Rochelle, and her
mother who had accompanied her, asked if they were any closer to a diagnosis.
She said: 'My Mum asked her "Can you see what it
is?" and the doctor said "If you don't mind I'd prefer to speak to
the registrar before I tell you anything".
'My Mum said "Please tell us" and that's when the
doctor said "You've got maggots in your ear". I burst into tears
instantly.'
Doctors tried to get the maggots out but the more medics
delved into her ear, the more the larvae retreated into Rochelle's head.
'I was very scared - I wondered if they were in my brain. I
thought to myself "This could be very, very serious."'
Doctors ordered an emergency brain scan to find out if any
damage had been done by the maggots, as well as to determine how many
there were and where they were hiding.
There was a
risk that they were migrating through her head. If one reached her brain it
could cause meningitis, fatal bleeding and if one ate through her facial nerve
she might be left facially paralysed.
Luckily, the scan showed that no damage had been done to
Rochelle's ear drum, blood vessels or facial nerve.
But they did discover that the maggots had chewed a 12mm
hole into a ear canal.
The scan revealed that the maggots have burrowed 12mm into Rochelle's head
Doctors then tried to drown them by flooding the ear canal
with olive oil.
'I had to
wait overnight to see if the treatment worked,' said Rochelle. 'It was longest
few hours of my life.
'I just wanted them out of me and now I knew what was
causing the sensations and sounds it made it all the worse.'
The next day
doctors checked her ear and astonishingly the maggots were still alive. They
managed to remove two, but doctors were concerned there might be one more left
inside her.
Rochelle was sedated and surgeons explored her ear using a
microscope and speculum. They were shocked by what they found.
As they pushed further inside the ear, they found what they
described as a 'writhing mass of maggots'. The two of maggots that had been
extracted were not alone - further examination revealed Rochelle was in fact
hosting a family of eight large maggots.
The maggots
were immediately sent to a lab for analysis where it was discovered that that a
New World Army Screw Worm Fly had laid eggs inside her ear.
Rochelle said she remembered walking through a swarm of
flies when in Peru and a fly had got inside her ear. But once she had shooed it
away she thought nothing more of it.
Since her traumatic encounter, Rochelle has suffered no
long-term problems and she says that there has been a positive side-effect of
having maggots living in her head.
She said: 'I'm no longer as squeamish as I was about bugs -
how can you be when they've been inside your head?'
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