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HEALTH HELL

One minute I was fine, the next I woke up with no arms or legs – and my best friend is in the same boat

The condition they both developed kills 11million worldwide every year

WHEN Lynne Polselli lost her arms and legs to sepsis, there was one special friend she could rely on.

Helping her through it all was Pam Buschle, and she had a good reason to understand exactly what Lynne was going through.

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Lynne Polselli in hospital after losing her limbs to sepsisCredit: SUPPLIED
The 52-year-old with her best friend Pam, 64, who is also a quadruple amputeeCredit: SUPPLIED

Pam, 64, had also lost her arms and legs in exactly the same circumstances after also developing the killer condition.

After being in a coma, she woke up and found her limbs missing - after doctors had to amputate them to save her life.

Lynne, 52, who lives in Michigan, USA, with husband Lou, 63, says: "Having Pam by my side was the best medicine I could have asked for.

"It was a shock to lose all my limbs like this - I never expected it when I was taken into hospital, but it was the only way to save my life.

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"And having Pam there for me has been a lifesaver - I couldn’t have got through it all without her.

"When you lose your arms and legs, there is so much that you can’t do, and Pam has helped me adapt and learn to do things differently."

Lynne started feeling ill in May this year, and initially thought it was a kidney infection

She says: "I woke up one morning feeling incredibly exhausted.

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"I’d been out with friends the night before and it had been very cold, so initially I thought it was that.

"But by the evening, I couldn’t get out of bed and Lou called an ambulance.

I thought I had a winter cold then I woke from a coma about to lose my legs

"I felt a little better by the time I got to the hospital and the doctors put a stent in one of my kidneys as they thought I had a blockage from a kidney stone."

But the next morning, Lynne's temperature had soared and her internal organs started shutting down.

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She was put on a ventilator and her family were told to come and see her, as the doctors didn’t know if she was going to make it.

"It was so scary for Lou," recalls Lynne.

"I don’t remember any of it. My organs were shutting down, and doctors had to divert blood from my extremities to the organs to try and keep them working."

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The treatment worked, and Lynne awoke from her coma, but her hands and feet had turned black because of the lack of blood to them.

"I remember looking down and seeing my hands, they were black and yet I’d recently had a manicure so they had perfect bright pink nail polish on," says Lynne.

"It looked so strange. Initially they thought they could save my feet, but eventually they told me they needed to amputate all four limbs.

"It was a shock, but the main thing was I was still alive."

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I looked down and realised I didn't have my hands

Pam BuschleSepsis survivor

Doctors carried out the amputations, and her family recalled that the previous year they had been to a family wedding of Lynne’s niece, and one of the guests had been Pam, who coincidentally was also a quadruple amputee.

She had lost her arms and legs to sepsis too, and had been at the family wedding.

Lynne says: "My niece’s husband grew up with Pam’s son, so she came to the wedding, although we didn’t talk at the wedding as we didn’t know each other previously.

"But I remember seeing her dancing and thinking how amazing she was."

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Pam was happy to help Lynne, and came to visit her in hospital as she recovered.

Pam, 64, who lives with husband Marty, 66, also in Michigan, had developed sepsis after a routine hysterectomy operation in December 2013.

'I wanted to help her'

Pam, a retired school social worker, says: "I felt so ill after coming home from the surgery that Marty took me back to hospital and shortly after I arrived, I fell unconscious. 

";My vital organs were shutting down and the doctors diverted blood flow to my organs, which risks limb loss.

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Pam, who fundraises for the Mary Free Bed Hospital, adds: "We want people to know that when you lose multiple limbs like Lynne and I have done, it isn’t the end of your life.  

"Lynne and I have a friendship that will last forever.

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"We go for dinner every fortnight together with our husbands, and we have such a special bond between us."

Lynne adds: "Pam is such a tower of strength to me.

"She’s been a wonderful friend and I wouldn’t be where I am today without her."

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