Sunday, May 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner

Darpan News Desk, 26 Jun, 2018 12:47 PM
    COURTENAY, B.C. — A coroner has concluded a 16-year-old British Columbia girl died of toxic shock syndrome while on a school trip last year.
     
     
    Coroner Courtney Cote says Sara Marie Manitoski was wearing a tampon and that a microbiologist confirmed toxic shock syndrome could not be ruled out based on that fact.
     
     
    Cote's report says Manitoski was at a provincial park on Hornby Island and was found dead in her cabin by other students on March 15, 2017.
     
     
    It says the teen had participated in events the night before but complained to friends about feeling unwell, having cramps, and hadn't eaten much before going to sleep.
     
     
    She was heard breathing rapidly and shallowly in the middle of the night and after she didn't join her friends for breakfast, they returned to the cabin and found her unresponsive in her bed.
     
     
    Students alerted teachers who performed CPR and paramedics took over but were unable to revive the girl.
     
     
    Cote says an autopsy found increased redness on Manitoski's neck, upper arms, upper chest, lower abdomen and thighs.
     
     
    "Toxic shock syndrome is an acutely life-threatening illness," she says in her report. "The risk for toxic shock syndrome is increased with tampon use. However, tampon use is not the sole cause. Therefore, it is not possible to definitely exclude the tampon as causative."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening

      Vancouver Police arrested a robbery suspect Sunday evening after he allegedly pushed a woman to the ground and ran off with her purse in Vancouver’s West End.

    Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation
    VANCOUVER — School trustees in Vancouver have approved a plan that would see BC Hydro finance the construction of a new elementary school in the city's West End and replace another, in exchange for building a substation under school board property.

    BC Hydro Aims To Fund Two Vancouver Schools In Exchange For Underground Substation

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year
     Latest Overdose Statistics, Show 109 People Died In May From Illicit Drugs

    B.C.'s Illicit Overdose Deaths Decreasing Almost Every Month This Year

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood
    The mournful cries of peacocks could soon be silenced in a Surrey, B.C., neighbourhood after city council voted to roust the birds.

    Messy, Screeching Peafowl To Be Removed From Surrey, B.C., Neighbourhood

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack
    This Is The Third Reported Shooting In Cloverdale Since Saturday, And 25th Shots-fired Incident So Far This Year

    RCMP Seek Suspect After Man Shot, Woman Injured In Targeted Surrey, B.C., Attack

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration
    VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier John Horgan says the American administration needs to "wake up" over trade tariffs on aluminum, pulp and softwood lumber.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Blasts Protectionism Of Trump Administration

    PrevNext