Mosquito bites are very irritating and may lead to serious infections like dengue. If the insects have specific diseases or parasites, their bites can result in serious infections. A German man recently experienced a number of health problems, including slipping into a coma and needing 30 operations, all brought on by a mosquito.
Sebastian Rotschke, 27, a resident of Roedermark, reportedly had a life-threatening incident after being bitten by an Asian tiger mosquito in the summer of 2021, according to a Daily Star report. He initially displayed flu-like symptoms, but that was only the beginning. Rotschke underwent thirty operations, had his two toes partially removed, spent four weeks in a coma, and had thirty operations. In addition, he experienced blood poisoning and multiple instances of liver, kidney, heart, and lung failure.
The doctors quickly deduced that the bite from an Asian tiger mosquito was the root of the problem
In addition, Rotschke required skin transplant surgery on his thigh to eliminate an abscess that had developed there. He believed that his odds of survival were poor since, according to a tissue sample, cancerous bacteria had nearly completely consumed his left thigh.
Rotschke discussed his experience with Daily Star, saying “I’ve never traveled abroad. This must be where the bite occurred. Then it just kept getting worse. I became bedridden, hardly managed to use the restroom, developed a fever, and was unable to eat. I believed the end was near. My grey sweatpants were fully saturated when I suddenly saw them. On my left thigh, a sizable abscess developed out of nowhere. The doctors quickly deduced that the bite from an Asian tiger mosquito was the root of the problem and sought out a specialist.”
Insisting that he is “OK so far,” Rotschke, who is now off work due to illness, warned others to be cautious of similar mosquito stings. The daytime-biting Asian tiger mosquito, commonly known as the forest mosquito, can spread dangerous diseases like Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), Zika, West Nile, Chikungunya, and dengue fever.