Research  |  Core Facilities  |  Patient Studies  |  Tech Transfer  |  Seminars  |  Intranet  |  Jobs  |  Search  |  Contact Us  |  Ways To Give                             HOME  
 

 

OMRF Stories

Higher Powers:
How 1,100 nuns, priests and brothers are helping OMRF researchers unlock the secrets of Alzheimer's.

Cooties in the Lab:
Whither the White Lab Coat?

Going With the Flow:
Dr. Margaret Clarke, OMRF Microbiologist.

Research Tower:
OMRF unveils the greenprint for a historic campus expansion.

Meagan's Miracle:
An OMRF discovery saves a dying college student.

Lessons In Philanthropy:
Putnam City School students learn early that giving to OMRF’s cancer research efforts is a good thing.

Prayers Answered:
Two Oklahomans suffering from a rare, life-threatening disease.

The Giver:
Jim Chapman’s generosity helped make OMRF what it is today.

Cancer From Every Angle:
OMRF researchers seeking clues to a variety of cancers.

Next of Kin:
It doesn't matter if you're a banana, fruit fly or writer; DNA is inside all your cells. Join OMRF's Greg
Elwell as he peels back his own genetic skin

The Strange Case of Tom Little
The Strange Case of Tom Little

The Comeback Kid:
An OMRF Discovery helped bring Rayna Dubose back from death, then Rayna had to learn to live again

Mighty Mice
Mighty Mice

Predicting Disease:
Live, Long and Prosper

This Is My Brain on 3-Tesla MRI

Autism: A Personal Story
Bringing up Jeremy

OMRF People
Bon Appetit

A New Birthday

Hitting the Right Note: Bob Floyd

Running Man: Gary Gorbsky

Family Matters: Kathy Moser

The Gospel According to Luke (Szweda)

Autism, Our Story

The Survivor

It's In The Genes

 

 

Meagan McLain was 21 years old. A college student. And dying.

Temperature 106. Heart rate 180. Blood pressure plummeting. In the ICU at the Midwest Regional Medical Center, physicians and nurses scrambled to stabilize her. But to no avail.

Meagan had come to the hospital complaining only of pain in her lower back. Soon, though, her blood oxygen dropped to dangerous levels. Her heart was racing at a gallop, her body burning up with fever. And then her breathing, at first labored and halting, stopped altogether.

Doctors pushed a tube down her throat, into her lungs. Within moments, they hooked a ventilator to the tube, and a machine began to do for Meagan what her lungs could not—breathe.

Still, her physicians had no idea what had pushed this University of Central Oklahoma student to the verge of death. Or how to stop it.
You’ve probably never heard of sepsis. Meagan hadn’t. But, as her doctors would soon discover, that was what was killing her.

Sepsis is the body’s attempt to counter another infection that has moved into the bloodstream. The problem is, that massive, system-wide counterattack often proves more devastating than the original infection. Blood vessels become inflamed, and their cell walls leak fluid. The clotting system goes haywire, simultaneously causing bleeding and throwing clots. The resulting tissue and organ death makes sepsis one of the most dangerous threats in intensive care units: All told, it kills 250,000 Americans each year.

In Meagan’s case, the original infection had come in the form of a pimple. What she didn’t know is that this seemingly innocuous skin infection harbored dangerous Staphylococcus bacteria. Those bacteria eventually migrated to her lower back, where they formed a large, painful abscess below the skin.

When Meagan went to the hospital, physicians—suspecting her back pain was caused by meningitis—performed a spinal tap. In the process, they discovered an abscess, and the infection subsequently spread into her bloodstream. That’s when Meagan went septic.
“She’s dying! She’s not going to make it!”

Meagan’s mother knew death. Working at Midwest Regional Medical Center, Monica Parham saw it each day. Watching her daughter lying motionless, unconscious and hooked to a ventilator, she began to try to wrap her mind around the unthinkable. “I was losing my baby girl.”

As Parham kept a vigil by Meagan’s bedside, doctors approached her with a set of permits. We have a drug we think might help your daughter, they said.

Parham could scarcely process what they were saying. “I was too much of a basket case.” So Meagan’s father, Rex McLain, signed the forms. And in minutes, doctors began an IV drip of a drug called Xigris. It was, the doctors said, the last, best chance to save Meagan’s life.

Hear Meagan's Story in her own words at OMRF Interactive.

More>>

 

Email This PageEmail this page