Man loses leg to flesh-eating bacteria after swimming in Florida

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Thursday, May 7, 2015
Man recovering from flesh eating bacteria
After seven surgeries, doctors have amputated the man's leg and say he's lucky to be alive.

FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Doctors are issuing a warning about swimming with open wounds after a man in Florida had to have his leg amputated because of a flesh-eating bacterial infection.

Zach Mody only had a minor cut on his toe when he went swimming off a Fort Myers beach in the Gulf of Mexico about a month ago. Now, he's in a hospital bed and is missing one leg.

"I would have never thought in a million years this would have happened to me," Mody told ABC affiliate WZVN-TV.

His symptoms started shortly after his visit to the beach.

"I noticed my foot was a little irritated and it just had a little red spot on it," Mody recalled.

Twelve hours later, Mody said the pain became unbearable. He checked himself into Health Park Hospital.

"By the time that I got from downstairs to the operating room, there were these big giant blood blisters on my foot," Mody said.

Doctors diagnosed it as a flesh-eating bacteria that quickly spread up his leg. A doctor told him at that time that it was a surgical emergency and that amputation was a possibility.

Mody, a master carpenter and avid motorcyclist, would undergo seven surgeries before doctors finally removed his leg.

"This is horrible. It hurts," Mody told WZVN-TV. "The mental aspect you have to have to keep a smile on your face to go through something like this. I don't know how I'm doing it."

Recent water tests of the area where Mody was swimming came back negative for any dangerous levels of bacteria.

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