A 68-year-old man from Florida was discharged from the hospital earlier this month after contractingflesh-eating bacteriaon his buttocks.
Shortly after returning home from a May trip with his wife to the Florida Panhandle where heswam in warm water,Mike O’Grady noticed what appeared to be a boil on his backside.
But over the next three weeks his condition grew more severe, and eventually he decided to go to the hospital.
“It was very, very intense,” O’Grady shared. “I mean, my buttocks were swollen up.”
WFLA

He spent two weeks at Citrus Memorial Hospital in Inverness.
“As many of you may know Mike has been in the hospitalbattling terrible infectionssince last Wednesday night June 27th,” his wife wrote in an emotional Facebook post earlier this month, adding that his health was “improving” after undergoing six surgeries.
“He will remain in the hospital until they are confident the infection is gone,” she added, asking friends and family members to pray for her husband.
Detailing his time in the hospital, O’Grady told ABC Action News that thesix surgeries were performed on consecutive days“to make sure they got everything out.”
He continued: “They took my digestive system out and inspected it to make sure there was nothing necrotizing on it and then put it all back in.”
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Shortly before going on the trip, he said, he got shots in his lower back and buttocks for pain management
“[The bacteria] got in, possibly, most likely through this slight little tiny injection site where the steroids were put in. The bacteria got in through those pinhole-type injections,” he explained.
O’Grady was finallyable to go homeon July 11.
While O’Grady was lucky to survive his brush with flesh-eating bacteria, he knows his story could have ended differently.
“I am very grateful to be alive,” he told ABC Action News, beforeurging others to take caution.
“It could happen to anybody,” he explained. “If you are thinking of going swimming and you have a little tiny cut, maybe think twice about going.”
At least nine other peoplehave contracted flesh-eating bacteria this year after spending time in or near the water in places like Florida, Texas and Maryland.
While cases of necrotizing fasciitis increase in the summer because the parasite thrives in warmer waters, the disease isvery rare. Chances of contracting it are slim, especially if you’re healthy and have a strong immune system, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
source: people.com