Fire Ants Almost Kill 13-Yr. Old

rockin'robin

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CENTRAL, La. — Fire ants are the scourge of the Louisiana lawn, but their venomous stings can be as dangerous as those from bees, ants or wasps. Patrick Dodson, 13, and his mother, Donna Dodson, learned that one Sunday afternoon in March while doing yard work at their Central home.

Patrick Dodson fetched a bag of mulch made from a tree blown down by Hurricane Gustav in September. It tore open as he headed to the flower beds, and his leg was covered in hundreds of ants.

"Once I noticed them, I kind of freaked out, and that's when they started biting me," he said. "It didn't really hurt until 10 minutes afterward."

Most people call them bites, and fire ants often do anchor themselves with a bite — but it's the sting that hurts. And, unlike bees or wasps, each ant can sting many times.

Patrick's mother washed the ants off his leg, applied an antihistamine cream and sent her mother, Alice Reine, to the store for a liquid antihistamine.

But 20 minutes later, Patrick came to her with a flushed face and swollen lips and nose. Donna Dodson took him to an after-hours clinic, where he passed out while she was filling out paperwork.

He came to in the exam room, got a shot and passed out again. The clinic called an ambulance to take him to the emergency room.

"The venom from the ants just shut his body down," Donna Dodson said. "It just quit. It was just too much."

Doctors at Baton Rouge General Medical Center gave him intravenous fluids to flush out the venom. His blood pressure kept dropping. Donna Dodson was sent out of the room as her son went on life support.

His heart stopped beating twice.

"A couple of hours later, they told me he was in the ICU," Donna Dodson said. "They couldn't guarantee he would make it through the night."

Donna Dodson let Patrick's two older brothers, both Marines who have served in Iraq, know how ill he was. The American Red Cross flew them to Baton Rouge.

"When you have two in the military, you pray at night that they'll come home to you," Donna Dodson said. "You never think the one you have at home would be the one you lose. You never think of the baby at home."

In three days, Patrick Dodson was weaned off the ventilator. By Friday, he was back home.

The Dodsons aren't certain how many stings Patrick had. A hospital nurse stopped counting at 210, Donna Dodson said.

The venom from ants is in the same classification as other stinging insects, such as bees, wasps and yellow jackets, said Dr. Melinda Frantz, director of the pediatric intensive care unit at Baton Rouge General Medical Center.

About 9.3 million people are stung by ants each year, and most just get itchy bumps, Frantz said.

She said only 1 to 2 percent have a more generalized reaction, such as wheezing, dizziness, fever, vomiting and diarrhea. And of those few, only about 5 percent go into anaphylactic shock, a severe allergic reaction that can be deadly, she said.

"It's a very small percentage," she said.

But it needs a doctor immediately, either at the office or in an emergency room, she said, and people known to be allergic to insect stings should carry an epinephrine injection with them.

People who die from insect stings do so within 30 minutes to four hours. "We're talking about a very short window," she said.

In Patrick Dodson's case, the number of stings may have caused this reaction — but his immune system now could overreact again from far fewer stings, he said.

Donna Dodson said her son now keeps an epinephrine injection with him at all times in case of another ant sting. Patrick Dodson said he has been stung since.

But overall, things are getting back to normal.

"When somebody gets bit by ants, you're like, 'It's ants. Do I really have to go?' You start second guessing yourself — 'Am I overreacting?"' Dodson said. "They told me here if I had waited 45 minutes longer than I did, he wouldn't have made it."

Fire Ants Almost Kill 13-Year-Old Boy - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News - FOXNews.com
 
That is one lucky boy to be able to make it through this ordeal.

I've been bitten by these darn fire-ants and it is not a picnic! The stings hurts so much and so bad that I wanted to have a bad urge to itch it. :mad2:
 
Once you get bitten with almost lethal results, it can change how one carries their day to day activities.
 
Sucks, but as you guys are aware.. such is nature for any animal to strive to be number one, even subconsciously aware they are doing it. I was talking about this in the plastic bag topic (sorry, for that off-tangent topic, shel.. hehe)

Fire ants are also affecting certain animals to become extinct or endangered as well. I recall, there were some species of iguana/lizards that were nearly wiped out due to fire ants invading their homes and driving them away from their habitats.

In the USA, I think its Texas that seems to suffers big time the most from these critters!
 
I've seen stuff on TV about those fire ants. Makes me very, very grateful I've not seen any here in MN. Those little buggers sound downright scary!
 
Wow!! :shock: That was some miracle!

It had happened to me before too, when I was in Miami, FL to set up our tents, we were standing on top of the mound of dirt, all sudden a bunch of fire ants started to crawl up my legs and stung me, I felt pains and burning then realized there were fire ants. I started getting them off my legs immediately, man it burns! Grrr... So every-time I'm down in Miami I remind myself to wear pants!!
 
I'm glad that he made it. He's a very lucky boy. Stings are pretty bad when your body has a strong reaction to them. I hated being stung as a child so much that I take every possible measure to never get another one.
 
Fire Ants are very invasive in my yard now.

I get bit at least 3 times a week in my yard sometimes more.
 
Someone said he poured boiling water on every anthill and it was a safe, effecient way to kill most of those ants. Fight fire with fire!
 
*goose bump* I´m glad that boy is survived!! He is very lucky!!

I never experienced fire ants in my life. I think I saw them at insect house, Zoo...

I will go to Zoo with my co-workers due work outing tomorrow and will check fire ants in insect house.
 
Someone said he poured boiling water on every anthill and it was a safe, effecient way to kill most of those ants. Fight fire with fire!

Plain Grits

It kills them off as well.

I just sprinkle some grits on the mound and they die off. It is another non toxic safe way of ridding of Ants.
 
I remember when a family friend accidentally stepped on a fire ant hill. She suffered burn bites all over her foot and lower leg before she finally washed it off with water.
 
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