A family has been left heartbroken after a young woman was suddenly struck down with a mystery illness and died.
Ashley Timbery, 29, of Nowra on the NSW South Coast lost feeling in her legs on February 15 and collapsed before she was rushed to ICU at Shoalhaven District Memorial Hospital.
Doctors placed her in an induced coma as they conducted tests which found a number of cavities in her lungs, leading them to determine she had a ‘superbug’ infection which was attacking her organs.
After 10 days at the Shoalhaven hospital Ms Timbery was moved to St George Hospital in Sydney where doctors found she had specifically contracted Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
MRSA is a type of bacteria which are resistant to antibiotics, which makes infection by them extremely difficult to treat.
According to the Mayo clinic most people get the infection in hospitals or other healthcare settings such as aged care facilities, but it is also present in the wider community.
Ashley Timber, 29, collapsed on February 15 and later sadly died after an MRSA infection led to pneumonia
Other groups who are at an elevated risk are athletes, those in confined places such as army barracks or prisons, drug users, the immunocompromised, and those who have recently had surgery – though it is not confined to these groups.
Ms Timbery’s infection resulted in pneumonia which was her cause of death.
Her cousin Shantelle Locke said there were no clear symptoms that Ms Timbery was seriously sick leading up to when she collapsed.
‘Doctor seemed to think that she might have had the pneumonia for maybe a few weeks before she went to hospital, but she never got it treated and obviously didn’t know it was pneumonia,’ Ms Locke told Yahoo News.
Shantelle Lock (left) with her cousin Ashely Timbery (right) who she said had no obvious symptoms that she was seriously unwell
Ms Timbery only felt slightly lethargic and had one or two boils, which is a symptom of the infection that can resemble large pimples.
Her right lung had collapsed in Shoalhaven Hospital from the pneumonia, which doctors drained and help to inflate, but her left lung did the same when she got to St George.
‘The doctors showed us a CT scan showing a normal lung. Then they showed us hers (and) hers was just covered in holes,’ Ms Locke said.
‘This was a result of her lungs being clogged from the pneumonia, and from the bug starting to sit in the cavities in her lungs.’
Ms Timbery died on February 29.
Ms Locke said Ms Timbery’s mother in particular is struggling.
‘Due to Ashley being so young we unfortunately didn’t have a funeral plan in place.’
The family is asking for donations to help with Ms Timbery’s funeral costs.