A young wife from Wisconsin perished after getting an infection from a forest fungus.
Her death underscores a public, unknown life threat throughout the United States. Its cases are rare, but actually more common than an uninformed observer might have imagined.
Lethal Fungus Infection
31-year-old Sonya Cruz of Kenosha died on July 5 of an infection called blastomycosis. This happened because of blastomyces, a fungus living in the soil of wooded areas, The Daily Mail reports.
The story of Sonya’s tragic death has been shared by her widowed husband, John Cruz, who, together with the family, seeks to raise public awareness about the illness caused by forest fungi.
While the condition affects only 1-2 people per 100,000 annually in some US states, it kills up to 78% of those infected, a staggering death rate.
The fact that the infection is quite rare doesn’t help. It shares symptoms with many other diseases. Doctors are often unable to identify its cause on time and thus treat it properly, the report stresses.
That was the case with Sonya who first got sick on June 16 and was treated for pneumonia. Ten days later, she hadn’t improved and ended up sedated and on a ventilator.
It was not until this stage that doctors at St. Katherine’s Hospital identified blastomycosis as the cause of her illness, but that turned out to be too late. The infection occurs after spores from the deadly fungi species end up in the air and are inhaled by a person.
Wisconsin woman dead after contracting rare fungus found in soil https://t.co/j4AdwkzBXp
— Fox News (@FoxNews) July 8, 2023
And now………….”suddenly” 😪💔
*Sonya Cruz – Kenosha, Wisconsin U.S.
*July 5, 2023
*Died after allegedly contracting Blastomycosis, a ‘rare’ disease caused by a Fungus present in soil that releases harmful spores when disturbed-Deaths are rare…”https://t.co/Mp3t6lZzFQ pic.twitter.com/yEdv85HfEX— cheri maday (@resilient333) July 8, 2023
Mother-of-one in Wisconsin, 31, dies from rare fungus that is growing rapidly across US https://t.co/zi4fIawhRY pic.twitter.com/69q3nMW0hR
— Daily Mail US (@DailyMail) July 10, 2023
‘Whatever This Is’
Devastated husband John Cruz told Fox 6 that “whatever this is,” it took his wife – and his life away from him.
According to the late wife’s sister, Morgan Hughes, her illness occurred after a telecom company began digging around the former’s home for installing a cable.
The fungus that killed Cruz is the same that, in the spring, infected more than 100 workers of a paper mill in Michigan, the report points out.
In 2021, there were 82 cases of blastomycosis, with 23% of those infected losing their lives – even though in other years, the death rate was about 9%. Hughes said her sister’s death is under investigation by the Wisconsin health department.
Wisconsin alone saw 1,412 cases from 2011-2020. Of those, 60% were hospitalized and 124 (11%) died. The deadly fungus infection is expected to gain a lot more public attention as a precaution.
I had Histoplasmosis in 1972 – which was also initially treated as straight Pneumonia. I was sick and out of school for nearly a month. And I see it is still to be found in Maryland…50 years later…https://t.co/91rjEF0NfM
— RD Carrington (@rdcarrington) July 10, 2023
Rare Fungus Found in Soil Leaves Wisconsin Woman Dead
Health alerthttps://t.co/lU3hFBRcFW— Kimberley (@Kimmy33311) July 10, 2023
This article appeared in The State Today and has been published here with permission.
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings