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"A tooth infection can kill you, but rarely," warns a Cleveland Clinic expert. Here's how to recognize the risks and how it ...
suffered fatal anaphylactic shock soon after medics at University Hospital of North Durham administered the dye ahead of a CT ...
She was rushed to hospital, assessed for a tooth abscess, and given a CT scan to ... she wouldn't be dead, as a scan to rule out the infection would not have been required. Leigh - the mother ...
A mom went into anaphylactic shock from the contrast dye used in her CT scan, causing her to die within 90 minutes of its injection.
She was rushed to hospital and assessed for a tooth abscess before a CT scan was performed ... "If she could've got a dental appointment, she wouldn’t be dead, and if she could’ve got urgent ...
If she could've gotten a dental appointment, she wouldn't be dead, and if she could've gotten ... of North Durham for what were thought to be tooth abscess symptoms and possible Ludwig's Angina.
Doctors thought the mom from County Durham, England, had Ludwig’s angina — which the Cleveland Clinic explains is a life-threatening bacterial infection, commonly caused by an abscessed tooth.