A beautiful Thai swimsuit model developed rashes and blisters on her face and body when she was given this drug. Antibiotics he was allergic to — Three times.
“The pain was so terrible I thought I was going to die. It was so intense. My whole body was burning and aching. There are no words enough to describe what it felt like,” said Sasinan Chuenlosang, 31. told the viral press,
Chuenlosang, whose job was in IT, complained Sore throat When she went to a hospital in Bangkok on June 18, she had red marks in her eyes.
Doctors diagnosed him with tonsillitis and prescribed him an antibiotic called ceftriaxone, used to treat bacterial infections.
But it didn't help and things got worse. The online model had to return to the hospital three days later after suffering from chest tightness, rashes, blurred vision, swelling in her mouth and an inability to walk properly.
Chuenlosang said he was given another dose of the same medicine and diagnosed with chicken pocks,
He said his condition worsened, leaving him blind in his left eye.
He was rushed to the ICU, where doctors gave him a third injection of ceftriaxone.
Chuenlosang began to feel dizzy and her right eye became blurry and numb. She remained in the ICU for seven days.
He was later shifted to another hospital, where his condition was stated to be critical. Stevens-Johnson syndromeThis is a rare but potentially fatal reaction to medications or infections.
It usually starts Flu-like symptoms, followed by a painful rash that causes the top layer of skin to die and peel off.
By Monday, Chuenlosang was still bedridden and had to cut her long hair to treat her rashes.
He has wounds around his eyes and mouth and on his forehead and cheeks. His neck is bandaged to clean the blood and pus flowing on his face.
“Before this, I was working in an IT company, and I [an] “I used to work as an online model in my spare time. This situation has shattered my dreams. It has destroyed my previous life,” Chuenlosang recalls.
He is looking for an ophthalmologist So that his vision can be restored and he can return to work.
Meanwhile, Thailand's Deputy Public Health Minister Thanakrit Jittarerat said the government was investigating whether Chuenlosang's treatment was “in line with medical practice.”