Bikini wax was almost fatal
Bikini wax was almost fatal
Diabetic developed severe infection
By HELEN BRANSWELL The Canadian Press
TORONTO — It’s the story of a Brazilian wax that went south, a drive to get rid of the hair down under that nearly cost a young Australian woman her life.
Her doctors say it’s also a cautionary tale for other aficionados of the minimalist look — a warning that maximum depilation can potentially lead to debilitation, especially when it’s being performed on someone with a weakened immune system.
"I think the message . . . of this case is just to say: ‘Hey guys, you know, we need a bit of a reality check here,’ " says Dr. Lindsay Grayson, an infectious diseases specialist with Austin Health and the University of Melbourne.
"This might be fine and mostly pretty innocuous and fun, but for some people it’s not that. It can be quite serious."
The "some people" Grayson refers to are people whose immune systems are weakened — or compromised, in the language of the medical community. That typically encompasses people with HIV-AIDS, those on immune-suppressing drugs because they’ve undergone an organ transplant or people receiving cancer therapy. And in this case, it also refers to someone with poorly controlled diabetes.
The person in question is an unidentified 20-year-old Australian woman with Type 1 diabetes — the kind that requires regular insulin shots — who underwent a disastrous Brazilian bikini wax. Her physicians report on her startling case in an upcoming issue of the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
During the waxing procedure, which was performed by a trainee, the woman experienced some vulval bleeding, suggesting tearing of the skin. And in the two weeks after, she developed symptoms of a worsening infection — pain, swelling, redness and discharge.
By the time she sought medical help she was reporting excruciating pain, fever, a rash that extended up to the chest and neck and severe difficulty urinating. Examination showed her external genitalia were "grossly swollen." Doctors couldn’t do an internal examination because the woman was in too much pain; one was eventually performed after she’d been put under general anesthesia.
Her condition was so severe treating doctors thought she had necrotizing fasciitis — flesh-eating disease — and they urgently put her on a regime of heavy-duty antibiotics.
The woman didn’t have that rapidly progressing infection, caused by some strains of Streptococcus bacteria. But she did have a life-threatening Streptococcus pyogenes infection with what looked like a flare-up of a pre-existing herpes infection.
"If she had not received appropriate therapy, she would have died," Grayson said in an interview from Melbourne.
The antibiotics did the trick, though, and the woman recovered. She was released from hospital after 10 days and was able to return to work after 21.
But this tale of hair scares doesn’t end there.
Six months later, the woman again tried to denude her nether regions, this time eschewing wax and turning to the razor. Razors often make small tears in the skin and a few days later she was back in hospital with a second infection and herpes recurrence.
The second bout was less severe than the first, possibly because she sought care more quickly, Grayson says. "She was scared stiff."
While Grayson and his colleagues acknowledge that this case is probably at the severe end of the spectrum of hair-removal complications, they nonetheless think it sounds a crucial cautionary note.
"The importance of it is that it highlights a potential new phenomenon and that is the impact of the beauty industry on patients such as this," Grayson says.
© 2007 The Halifax Herald Limited
LOL that poor woman…she has been identified as having herpes…LOL atleast they didnt publish her name.
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Maybe it’s just me, but if one is going to have something like this done by a trainee there should’ve been a supervisor there to make sure that the procedure was done right. I know that some salons like my aunt’s won’t allow a trainee to do a waxing without someone there to show them if they’ve done something wrong, etc….
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