https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article14435644.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/1_IMG_0608JPG.jpg
Marguerite Henderson fell into a coma and was put on dialysis (Image: Daily Record)

Grandmother who had to have four limbs amputated after tiny paper cut shares ordeal

by

A grandmother who had to have all four of her limbs amputated after getting blood poisoning from a tiny paper cut has written a book about her ordeal.

Brave Marguerite Henderson has vowed to devote her life to preventing others suffering the same fate.

The 57-year-old developed sepsis, which spread throughout her body, the Daily Record reports.

The mum-of-two was left fighting for her life in early 2018.

She lost her left arm below the elbow and was left with just half a thumb on her right hand.

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article14435646.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_IMG_0461JPG.jpg
Marguerite Henderson pictured in hospital while she was fighting for her life (Image: Daily Record)

Ten days later both her legs were amputated below the knees.

Marguerite now hopes a book she has written about her experience will help others.

Writing  Sepsis Raw and Real  was a long process as she typed all 80,000 words on her computer with her half thumb.

She said: “There are so many people having to live with the consequences of having contracted sepsis. It is such a life-threatening illness and can be so easily missed.

“If you have any symptoms ask yourself and ask the doctor, ‘Could it be sepsis?’, particularly if you have any kind of injury, however small.

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article14435643.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_Marguerite-Henderson.jpg
Marguerite is now recovering and getting used to life with her prosthetic limbs (Image: Edinburgh Live WS)

“It affects you so quickly, every second matters. I didn’t get to hospital in time and because my vital organs were starting to close down all the efforts were put into saving my organs. That meant it went to my extremities and I had to get amputations.”

Marguerite has dedicated the book to the woman she credits with getting her walking again, her physio Kerry Murphy.

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article12277415.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/PAY-PAPERCUT_SEPSIS_GRAN_DN05.jpg
Marguerite with granddaughter Erin (Image: Deadline News)

She added: “I hope the book helps people recognise how serious sepsis is. But it also shows how you can face diversity and rise to the challenge. You have just got to keep fighting.”

Her ordeal started with a paper cut on the index finger of her right hand that was so tiny that she doesn’t know how it happened.

She noticed it on a Sunday night and by the next day there was a blister. By the Tuesday she was too ill to make it to her GP. On the Wednesday, oldest daughter Kim, 29, rushed her to A&E.

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article12277414.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/PAY-PAPERCUT_SEPSIS_GRAN_DN04.jpg
Marguerite with granddaughter Gracie (Image: Deadline News)
https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article12277412.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/PAY-PAPERCUT_SEPSIS_GRAN_DN06.jpg
Marguerite with daughters Emma (L) and Kim (R) (Image: Deadline News)

Marguerite spent six months in hospital before going home to a specially-built annexe at Kim’s house in Crosshill, Fife.

She said: “I have had to adapt to a different way of life. I was a hands-on mum and was babysitting for Kim’s children. In the blink of an eye I am not working and I can’t drive.”

A year after her illness, Marguerite got sepsis for a second time.

She said: “Because I recognised the trackline, I went straight to casualty and was put on ­intravenous antibiotics for five days, which treated it effectively.

“That’s the difference – if you get there quick enough you can change things for the better, rather than things ending up the way they did for me the first time.”