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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Josie Adnitt & Graeme Murray

Mum's terror over crippling Strep infection that left her daughter, 6, unable to walk

A Strep A infection left a woman's daughter unable to walk.

Kadie Dolphin first noticed Nancie Rae's symptoms on November 8 and hours later her daughter was in hospital.

The six-year-old suffered severe swelling and was unable to walk.

She has now recovered from the infection and is back to her normal,

But the mum-of-five has shared her harrowing experience to help other parents recognise the symptoms in their own children.

Kadie said: “The doctors said that it being caught early was reason she got well so quickly.

“I was absolutely petrified to be honest - at the point where she started to turn really bad, we didn’t know what it was and it felt like it took forever to find out what was wrong.

Nancie Rae Dolphin after she was admitted to hospital (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)
Kadie Dolphin first noticed symptoms of her daughter Nancie Rae's infection November 8 (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)

“The doctor was saying that the swelling was coming up before her eyes, [Nancie Rae] was swelling right before us, the doctor said we really are concerned and it was then that I thought ‘oh god’.

“The worrying thing is that I didn’t know what was going on - I was looking at her thinking ‘am I going to walk out without my daughter’.”

Kadie, a healthcare assistant, from Warrington, Cheshire, first noticed something was wrong with Nancie Raeat night on November 7.

Her daughter came downstairs complaining of an itchy bell and Kadie noticed there was a small mark resembling a mosquito bite on her tummy and her knee.

She gave her daughter an anti-histamine and thought nothing more of it.

But Nancie Rae came downstairs the next morning at 6am with a high temperature and a rash where the ‘bites’ had been.

Kadie said: “On November 7, my daughter finished school happy and healthy – she’s a livewire anyway, she’s crazy.

“About 6pm she came downstairs and said ‘mummy my belly is itching’, it looked like she had a little bite.

“Because she’d been out playing, I assumed she had been bit by a mosquito and had a reaction.

“I gave her an antihistamine but the next morning the rash was all over her belly – it was a weird, flat rash and she was very hot to touch.”

Nancie Rae Dolphin suffered severe swelling and was unable to walk (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)
Kadie, Nancie Rae and Edie Dolphin (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)

Kadie tried to get a GP appointment but was told nothing would be available until 6pm that day – and by 9.30am, Nancie Rae’s hand had begun to swell up.

She took her daughter to Halton Urgent Care centre and in five minutes of arriving they were placed in a room and seen by a doctor.

They initially believed it to be an allergic reaction as Nancie Rae continued to swell in her hands, face and lymph nodes, but decided to move her to Warrington Hospital.

After arriving there, she was given Amoxycillin antibiotics while blood samples and a throat swab were tested before she was diagnosed with a Strep A infection.

Kadie said: “I went to Halton Urgent Care and said I thought it was a reaction so one doctor gave her a Piriton but another doctor said it wasn’t typical for an allergic reaction.

“She was swelling up before our eyes – a couple more fingers were swollen up, her lymph nodes were swollen, there were lumps in her throat and her legs were hurting.

Kadie Dolphin (L) with her daughter Nancie Rae (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)

“We went to Warrington Hospital and they started her on Amoxycillin, they had to take 11 vials of blood from her.

“She had lost the ability to walk, every joint was swollen up, she was completely red and still had a high temperature – that was when they took a throat swab for Strep A.

“Throughout the night the medicine wouldn’t kick in and they kept coming back saying she’s not getting better – she was kind of awake but she was very floppy and couldn’t hold herself up.

“Amoxycillin is useless to Strep A, so they changed from steroids to penicillin.”

She was given penicillin via an IV drip but because of the high concentration of antibiotic, it left the youngster with a burning sensation in her arms.

Nancie Rae was unable to walk or talk and Kadie says she was ‘screaming’ as she was in so much pain.

Doctors monitored her condition, as the pair remained in the hospital for two days.

Nancie Rae recovered from the infection, but her mum has warned about the symptoms after she needed hospital treatment (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)
Jamie, Nancie Rae and Edie Dolphin (Kadie Dolphi / SWNS)

After 48 hours, Nancie Rae’s condition improved as swelling reduced and she was allowed home with antibiotics.

She was left with some lasting effects, including damage to her kidneys and a secondary infection, but recovered at home and is back to her ‘normal crazy mental self’.

Kadie said: “The care given has been fantastic, I can’t fault the NHS whatsoever - they were absolutely amazing and really on the ball.

“For a six-year-old she’s quite tiny anyway and this infection has ravished her body but she's back to her normal crazy mental self.

“She’s wild doesn’t give us a minute's peace, once she’s opened her eyes she won’t shut up.

“All we keep hearing about is the children passing but that’s not all it is, she’s home and fine now, as awful as it was, we need to build immunity.”

The NHS website says the main symptoms parents and caregivers should look out for are:

  • Flu-like symptoms such as a high temperature, swollen glands, or an aching body
  • Sore throat
  • A rash that feels rough, like sandpaper
  • Scabs and sores
  • Pain and swelling
  • Severe muscle aches
  • Nausea and vomiting

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