A mother was forced to have her right leg
amputated when it became infected with a flesh-eating bug after she cut it
shaving.
Tanya Czernozukow, 43, initially thought nothing of it when she nicked
her right shin with a razor and ignored it when it turned into a scab the size
of a 5p coin.
But six months later it tripled in size until it was a 'huge hole' and
doctors then spent 18 months trying to stop the aggressive infection from
spreading up her thigh.
She tried tablets, creams and even maggots to get rid of the infection,
but after months of agony Mrs Czernozukow agreed to have it amputated above the
knee.
She was eventually diagnosed with a chronic leg ulcer which developed
into gangrene because her diabetes meant it could not heal properly.
Fortunately, the operation halted the infection and Mrs Czernozukow now
says she is pain free and getting on with her life - although she is now too
scared to shave her other leg and waxes it instead.
Mrs Czernozukow of Breaston, Derbyshire,
said: 'It has been an absolute nightmare.
'It was just a little nick. I just went "ouch" and thought
nothing of it.
'I've done it a thousand times before so I just put a bit of tissue on
it and expected it to stop bleeding.
'Within a few weeks it was green and black from my ankle right up to my
knees.
'The pain was absolutely sheer hell.'
During her ordeal Mrs Czernozukow was diagnosed with diabetes and this
was slowing down her body's ability to heal itself.
Doctors then told her the wound had turned into a leg ulcer, which is a
chronic complication of diabetes because the condition interferes with blood
supply to the legs.
The ulcer then developed into gangrene because swelling around the
infection limited the blood supply to the flesh, starving it of vital nutrients
and oxygen.
'I had to take more and more
painkillers,' Mrs Czernozukow said. 'It was a constant feeling of
thousands of needles being stuck into me.
'I used to sit with my leg in a plastic bag - there used to be that much
fluid seeping out of it, I felt like I was in a horror movie.'
'It got to the point where I said to the
doctors "take it off"'
'After a while it looked like gangrene,' Mrs Czernozukow said. 'It
looked like I had a flesh-eating bug. It just kept growing and growing and
growing.
'It got to the point when I just said to the doctors, "take it off.
I want it gone".
'When I first came round I got one hell of a shock. There was only
inches of my leg left.
'It was just complete and utter shock. To see it gone was like waking up
in a nightmare.'
It was in April 2014 that Mrs Czernozukow was
shaving her legs when she nicked her right shin.
The scab spread to the size of a 5p peice and Mrs Czernozukow's mum
urged her to see her GP but she refused.
She said: 'I was like "yeah, yeah" but didn't. I had never had
any other health problem.
'I've never felt pain like that in my life'
'A week later the pain got so bad I went to A&E and was hospitalised
for five days where doctors said it was a leg ulcer and put me on strong
antibiotics.
'I've never felt pain like that in my life.'
The infection was so bad she was even forced
to quit her job as a sales representative.
She returned to hospital three times for treatments including biotherapy
– where medicinal maggots clean the wounds by eating the dead tissue but to no
avail.
Mrs Czernozukow said: 'They did biotherapy
which involves attaching maggots to your leg. For 24 hours I was screaming in
agony.
'By the third time I went into hospital, it covered my whole leg.
'It was just completely infected. It was too far gone. It was too
little, too late.'

In April 2016 doctors at Nottingham's Queen's Medical Centre finally
suggested taking the drastic step of removing the leg.
They diagnosed her with diabetes, and said the ulcer and infection was a
result of the disease.
Mrs Czernozukow, who has a grown up daughter, added: 'They said
"have you thought about amputation?"

'They said we don't have to amputate but it could take years to heal if
it heals at all and I just said to them "right, yes, take it off. I want
it gone".'
After the operation, Mrs Czernozukow was in hospital for five months and
once she was discharged had to learn how to move, sit up and walk with a frame
or a stick.
Culled from Dailymail
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