Posted on 03/12/2004 9:02:03 AM PST by B4Ranch
Coroner says common bacteria killed Antioch girl
By Sandy Kleffman CONTRA COSTA TIMES
ANTIOCH - The mystery is solved.
Experts at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta have discovered what killed 7-year-old Jessie Geyer of Antioch.
But the answer causes even more anguish for her parents.
Jessie died from a group A streptococcal infection that spread throughout her body.
A CDC fact sheet describes it as a common bacterium that doctors treat with antibiotics.
Although her parents rushed Jessie to a pediatrician and a hospital emergency room two days before her death, no one gave her antibiotics or did a blood culture at that time, according to forensic pathologist Kelly Arthur, who performed the autopsy.
Jessie's mother says a doctor at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek told them that Jessie probably had a flu-related virus. He sent them home.
Now her parents agonize over a critical question: Might Jessie have survived, or at least had a fighting chance, if doctors had correctly diagnosed her?
Her parents maintain that Jessie's death highlights flaws in the American health care system.
"Jessie got taken to the doctor and over the next 65 hours, she fell through the cracks," said her father, Mark Geyer. "Nobody followed up correctly."
For months, Jessie's abrupt death on Halloween night baffled Arthur.
Unable to find a cause, the pathologist sent tissue from Jessie's major organs to the CDC for analysis.
Experts there identified the streptococcal organisms in blood vessels in many of Jessie's organs.
Arthur would later learn why she could not find the infection herself.
Initially, no one told her that when Jessie was seen in a second emergency room the night she died, the team at Sutter Delta Medical Center in Antioch gave her antibiotics as they struggled to save her life.
They did so before collecting a specimen for a blood culture.
Often, when this happens, the antibiotics inhibit the growth of microorganisms in a blood culture, resulting in false-negative readings, Arthur said.
By the time Jessie received the antibiotics, her organs were shutting down.
Her parents watched in horror as their daughter slipped away.
Compounding the tragedy for the Geyers is their belief that they took all the proper steps to protect their daughter.
"We just simply took her to the doctor for something that she had that didn't seem to be life-threatening," Mark said. "There was nothing remarkable about this."
One aspect of Jessie's death will remain a mystery.
Arthur could not determine how the bacteria entered her body.
Group A streptococcus often appears in the throat and on the skin. Many people carry it without getting sick.
It is spread through direct contact with mucus from the nose or throat of an infected person, or through contact with infected wounds and skin sores.
The bacteria can cause strep throat and other mild illnesses. Nearly 10 million such infections occur annually in the United States.
But on rare occasions, Group A streptococcus can lead to life-threatening diseases. That happens when the bacteria evade the body's defenses and become widespread. A break in the skin, for example, may enable bacteria to enter tissue directly.
The Geyers have wondered if a scrape on Jessie's left leg from a rollerblading fall 10 days before she became ill could have been an entry point.
But Arthur did not find widespread infection in the knee wound or in Jessie's tonsils. There was no sign she had strep throat.
In 10 percent to 20 percent of such cases where bacteria spread throughout the bloodstream, experts never find a source of infection, Arthur said.
Jessie is not alone in getting severely ill from the bacteria. Each year, nearly 9,000 people in the United States develop invasive group A streptococcal infection.
When the bacterium infects the blood, muscle or lungs, it can lead to life-threatening streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, which causes blood pressure to drop rapidly and the kidney, liver, lungs and other organs to fail.
Because Arthur could not obtain a positive blood culture, it is unclear if Jessie went into toxic shock.
Even the best medical care does not always prevent death when toxic shock occurs, according to the CDC. It estimates that nearly half of people die in such cases.
Early treatment with antibiotics is key to prevent an infection from spreading, notes a CDC information sheet. That is what upsets the Geyers.
"Jessie didn't get a break one step of the way," said her mother, Michelle Geyer.
Forensic pathologist Arthur declined to speculate about whether early antibiotic treatment could have saved Jessie. But she did say: "The kind of infection that she had is very treatable with antibiotics."
The Geyers remain stunned at how quickly Jessie succumbed.
Two days before her death, their healthy daughter awoke with a temperature of 103 or 104 and such severe pain in her right leg she could barely straighten it or walk. The knee scrape was on her other leg.
Her mother carried her into her pediatrician's office. Jessie complained about missing the Halloween parade at John Muir Elementary School, where she was in second grade.
After a brief exam, Dr. James Evans told Michelle to rush Jessie to the John Muir Medical Center emergency room. He called John Muir and asked them to rule out septic knee, according to medical records. That refers to an infection localized in the knee.
Arthur would later conclude that Jessie died of "septic syndrome" resulting from a streptococcal infection that had spread throughout her body.
John Muir employees took X-rays of Jessie's leg and did blood tests. But they did not do a blood culture that might have revealed if she had a streptococcal infection, Arthur said.
John Muir's Dr. Mark Slomoff wrote in his medical records that his examination of Jessie's right knee, which was slightly warm, revealed no accumulated fluid.
Michelle Geyer says Slomoff told her Jessie probably had a flu-related virus that should last three or four days.
He gave her Motrin and sent them home, with instructions to see the pediatrician the next morning and to return if Jessie worsened.
The medical records do not mention a flu-related virus. For his diagnosis, Slomoff wrote "possibly viral synovitis," which refers to an inflammation of a knee membrane.
"I had a discussion with her pediatrician who felt that he would prefer that she not be started on antibiotics at this point in time," Slomoff wrote.
Antibiotics are generally considered useless for treating viruses such as a cold or the flu. Health officials in recent years have sought to reduce antibiotic use out of concern that overuse will foster drug-resistant germs.
Evans, Slomoff and John Muir officials declined to comment. Both physicians have a clean record in the California Medical Board database.
"Our sincere sympathies go out to Jessie's parents," said John Muir spokeswoman Barbara Hepner. "But it's the policy of our (emergency room) physicians not to discuss cases in the press."
On Thursday, the day after seeing Dr. Slomoff, Jessie still had a fever and leg pain. Michelle Geyer called Dr. Evans and told him the John Muir physician said Jessie had a flu-related virus that should last three or four days.
On Friday morning, Michelle Geyer called Evans again, telling him Jessie still had a fever. Could he prescribe something more for her pain?
Evans suggested Michelle bring Jessie back to his office. Believing that Jessie had the flu, Michelle asked what he would do differently than when he had seen her two days before. When he didn't have an answer, Michelle Geyer said, she told him she would bring Jessie in the following day if she wasn't better.
"Moving her was very, very painful for her," Michelle said this week. "She would shake."
That night, Jessie's fever broke and her leg began to swell. The Geyers called an advice nurse at an after-hours clinic, who said they appeared to be doing everything right. She set an appointment for 9 a.m. Saturday.
A short while later, Jessie called, "Mommy." Michelle Geyer rushed upstairs and discovered Jessie had become very cold. Her lips started turning blue and she had trouble holding up her head.
Her panicked parents rushed Jessie to the Sutter Delta emergency room, where a team fought to save her life. They pronounced her dead at 1:21 a.m.
The Geyers say they realize hindsight is perfect. But they criticize a health care system in which, they say, overworked doctors can rush through examinations, patients get little information, follow-up is minimal, and insurance companies pressure medical officials to keep costs down.
Although Jessie was in the John Muir emergency room for more than three hours while tests were performed, the Geyers say Dr. Slomoff spent about five minutes with Michelle and Jessie.
"It's not like it was when we were children," Michelle said. "You'd go in and you'd see a doctor and you'd get to know him. Now you're a number."
Because Slomoff declined to be interviewed, Contra Costa Newspapers could not confirm the Geyers' account.
Mark Geyer added that no one took the time to explain to them what was going on or discuss the best- and worst-case scenarios for Jessie.
"There was no interaction between the doctor and the parent," Mark Geyer said. "(Slomoff) didn't go over the panel tests with her. I mean, it would have taken another two minutes."
The Geyers urge other parents to push harder and to question medical decisions. They wish they had insisted that John Muir admit Jessie for observation.
"These days, you've got to be your own advocate," Mark Geyer said. "You don't take no for an answer and you don't let them push you around."
As the days pass, the Geyers find ways to cope with their grief over the little girl who loved pink and purple, arts and crafts and hugs with her classmates.
They try to provide a stable home life for Jessie's brothers, 5-year-old Jordan and 3-year-old Jamison.
The Geyers remain grateful for an outpouring of flowers, cards and phone calls from strangers after a Contra Costa Newspapers story about Jessie's death in early January.
"I am overwhelmed by how many wonderful people are out there," Michelle Geyer said. "I am just blown away by the response. That's a gift."
These days every little illness can jar nerves. When Jordan caught a cold recently, the Geyers took turns staying up with him all night. He nervously asked his parents: "Am I going to die?"
The entryway to the Geyers' home remains filled with memories of Jessie - photos from a family vacation, a card from her last birthday party, a heart drawn by a Scout troop after her death.
Although they cry when they hear it, the Geyers cannot bring themselves to remove Jessie's voice from their answering machine.
"Hi," she says. "You have called the Geyer family. We can't come to the phone right now, so please leave a message."
Then she bursts into a joyous giggle, as only a 7-year-old can do.
"These days, you've got to be your own advocate," Mark Geyer said. "You don't take no for an answer and you don't let them push you around."
It's clear to me that's what killed her.
I'd have done a CBC on the kid - her white count should have either been sky high or super low - depending on which stage of septicemia she was in when the test was done. The pediatrician should have insisted on a CBC when the mom called him back the next day after having been to the ER that night. After all, he suspected a septic knee. Those are the kinds of cases that used to keep me awake at night - and I'm only a vet.
When I lived in Hawaii a few years back, a lot of my friends would get strep if they went swimming with any kind of scratch on their leg. There are just too many visitors and Maui's sewerage system basically consists of dumping everything into the Pacific.
I've been fighting MRSA Staph from a leg wound myself for the last two months with Vancomicyn--a tough drug for a tough bug.
A friend lost his wife several years back to a bacterial infection missed by the Mt Diablo Hospital next door to the hospital mentioned in this article. Similar to Jim Henson. It seems bacterial infection is not suspected soon enough, and in people with low blood pressure, antibiotics do not get into the infected areas fast enough.
drug resistance is a huge problem....one brought on because too many docs have ordered blindly, ususally to appease the sick pt or his family....
In this case, it might have been wise to order blood cultures or to lance the knee and do a culture from the fluid....
hindsight is a wonderful thing, though.....
Take nothing for granted. Inform yourself as best you can. Question everything. The potential consequences of failing to do so are immense.
Is your family doctor dropping in on her for evaluations? You might ask him to, and or to give you reccomendations you might suggest to the hospital drs.
Have you asked the doctor what he is expecting from each treatment? Sometimes one treatment will cause something else to come forward. Ask if he is prepared for these situations or is he just waiting to see what happens.
Many times the 'something else' will show up in eight hours, so if he is only making daily visits to examine her, request that they be changed to twice daily.
When any of my family goes to our family doctor, I usually have a suggestion or two to make. Generally it is nothing more than a CBC, complete blood cell count, before taking any medicines.
That gives you a line of where to start from. If the white cells are too high or too low and you don't see a correction with the medicine then it's the wrong treatment.
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