[ad_1]
|
According to Dr. Sang, the patient can now open his mouth, open half his eyes, move 2/5 muscles, 3/5 leg muscles. Using the respirator, the patient responded. Currently, the patient is doing very active physical therapy twice a day, increasing nutrition to stop the ventilator early. The patient’s infection problem is being closely monitored.
“Hopefully, the patient will improve dramatically in the next time, quickly regain muscle strength, and return to normal activities,” Dr. Ngoc Sang said.
Before that, on the night of August 25, NND patients ate a lot of Pate Minh Chay. At 11:00 p.m. on August 26, the patient presented abdominal pain, vomiting, difficulty swallowing, difficulty speaking, and drooping eyelids; he was transferred to Ba Ria – Vung Tau Hospital in a state of limb weakness, complete collapse of the limbs. eyelids, difficulty. respiratory, then transferred to Cho Ray Hospital on August 27 with a diagnosis of myasthenia gravis and sent to the department of neurosurgery.
However, since the patient’s condition was not the same as myopathy, physicians who diagnosed and suspected Clostridium botulinum poisoning from ingesting Pate Minh Chay should be transferred to the Department of Tropical Diseases. At this time, the patient is awake, has no fever and paralysis has not improved, and is ventilated. Patients are on dialysis and complications caused by Clostridium botulinum toxin. The patient received an infusion of an antidote from September 12.
[ad_2]