By Tricitynews
Reporter
Chandigarh 27th April:- Ashok Kumar Mandal, a
41-year-old teacher in a village in Jharkhand, did not know what misfortune was
in store for him when he started having fever around January 2017. He had
urinary complaints as well and got initial treatment at Jharkhand and then at a
Kolkata hospital, where he underwent a urological intervention.
Further investigations in Kolkata revealed that he had
a left Parathyroid adenoma (parathyroid tumour) which was secreting parathyroid
hormone, in turn increasing his calcium levels in blood to alarming levels.
This led to multiple huge stones in both kidneys and severe urinary tract
infection (UTI).
He was referred to Chandigarh for further management
and he got admitted to Fortis Hospital, Mohali under Dr Vishal Bhambri, Senior
Consultant, Internal Medicine, on February 22.
Ashok Kumar Mandal’s fever refused to come down and he
was diagnosed with XDR (Extremely drug resistant) bacterial infection
(Klebsiella) in urine. He was given a combination of strong antibiotics for his
severe infection and his fever resolved. Meanwhile, his calcium levels were
normalized with Dr R Muralidharan’s help (Senior Consultant, Endocrinologist,
Fortis Hospital, Mohali). He was taken up for surgery by Dr. Naval Bansal
(Consultant, Endocrine Surgeon, Fortis Hospital, Mohali) who operated upon him
successfully and found that there was a thrombus (clot) in parathyroid draining
vein as well (of which very few reported cases in the world are there so far).
The patient was also taken up for urology intervention
(Bilateral PCN) by Dr. Priyadarshi Ranjan (Senior Urologist & Renal
Transplant Surgeon, Fortis Hospital, Mohali) on March 3. The infection
level in his kidneys was so high that it was felt by the Urologist to wait for
it to settle down before undertaking a definitive stone surgery. So he was
discharged from hospital on March 10.
He was admitted for the second time on March 25 and
Dr. Priyadarshi Ranjan undertook a major urological procedure to open up his
urinary system. His infection level was so high that he went into septic shock
with multi-organ failure after this surgery and his condition deteriorated ever
further. He developed deep jaundice and was on multiple medicines to maintain
B.P. at one time along with being on ventilator.
Dr Vishal Bhambri
said that good ICU support, teamwork & prayers brought him
back from the brink of death to life. The patient’s infection in blood and
urine turned out to be resistant to all antibiotics. Despite this, he was
treated well and got discharged on April 12 on patient’s request.
He required a third admission on April 14 with
recurrence of fever. His blood culture showed another very resistant infection
(VRE). Dr Vishal Bhambri said that this was again managed well and he got
discharged on April 20.
The patient, grateful to his doctors for their
efforts, said he was thankful that all specialists were available to take care
of all the complications. He said that he is returning to Jharkhand as a man
who has been gifted life by these doctors.
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