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  • Man dies working with compost

    I saw this in the paper and thought its some thing we all need to be aware of.

    A man has died after inhaling lethal spores which grew on rotting compost in his garden.

    The 47-year-old fell ill less than 24 hours after being engulfed by "clouds of dust" while working with rotting tree and plant mulch.

    At first medics thought the previously healthy welder had pneumonia when he was admitted with severe breathing problems.

    But when antibiotics failed to help, tests showed evidence of Aspergillosis, a reaction to Aspergillus spores.

    The fungus is commonly found growing on dead leaves, stored grain, compost piles or decaying vegetation.

    Its spores may trigger a relatively harmless allergic reaction or a much more serious destructive infection that begins in the lungs and spreads to other parts of the body.

    The man's death - which followed kidney failure and treatment on a heart and lung machine - was reported in The Lancet medical journal.

    Doctors, led by Dr David Waghorn from Wycombe Hospital in Buckinghamshire, wrote: "Unlike most patients with acute, invasive aspergillosis, our patient did not seem to be immunosuppressed.

    "However, smoking and welding could have damaged his lungs, increasing his vulnerability.

    "Since he died so quickly, we cannot exclude the possibility that he had an undetected immunodeficiency."

    They concluded: "Acute aspergillosis after contact with decayed plant matter is rare, but may be considered an occupational hazard for gardeners."
    Regards
    Lady Jana Muck

  • #2
    They concluded: "Acute aspergillosis after contact with decayed plant matter is rare"

    Last edited by Two_Sheds; 13-06-2008, 11:07 AM.
    All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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    • #3
      my daughter thinks when you die you go in the compost bin as dead flowers and leaves do maybe at 3 and half she happens to be right as is far more intelligent than i give her credit for.

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      • #4
        I have a friend who picked up an infection gardening and lost her ring finger - it was nearly far more serious...
        Tx
        Tx

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        • #5
          just goes to show really we just have to be responsible, there are dangers in most things, not gonna put me off thats for sure

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          • #6
            Alternatively - you stay in all the time and die of boredom?
            Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.

            www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring

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            • #7
              Quite, Flummery. As a horse-rider I know all too well that my sport has the highest rate of deaths, but I'd rather die doing that than staying in and watching Big Brother!

              A very sad death, though, nevertheless.

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              • #8
                I agree Flum

                On the other hand you have people like my Dad (8LGM) who doesn't believe there is any danger...

                A couple of months back he was rebuilding the shed on the lottie for me wearing his trainers (despite being told to get more protective footwear etc.) Anyhow, I was about to join him down there and phoned him to check if he needed anything else brought down. "Just plaster please" .... .... .... 8LGM doesn't use plasters even when the blood is gushing. When I quized him he told me it was 'nothing'. Okaaaay I thought

                I took down with me iodine wipes, bigs plasters, a bandage, water and change for the carpark at A&E (I kid you not). When I got there he was still working away.

                He had a rusty nail sticking through his foot

                He pulled it out, gave it wipe over and a plaster and carried on! Needless to say it bled so much while he carried on that he probbly bled all the nasties out of the wound. The nutter
                Shortie

                "There are only two lasting bequests we can hope to give our children; one of these is roots, the other wings" - Hodding Carter

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