Wuhan doctor, whose skin turned dark due to coronavirus treatment "dies after battling the deadly disease for nearly five months"

Wuhan doctor, whose skin turned dark due to coronavirus treatment "dies after battling the deadly disease for nearly five months"
# 02 June 2020 15:50 (UTC +04:00)

A Chinese doctor whose skin suddenly turned dark after falling critically ill with COVID-19 has reportedly died after fighting the killer infection for nearly five months, APA reports citing The Paper.

Dr Hu Weifeng, who caught the virus through work in January, passed at a hospital in the former epicentre Wuhan, Chinese news website reported today.

The 42-year-old medic had been treated in intensive care units for more than a months before losing his life to complications brought by the coronavirus, insiders told The Paper.

Dr. Hu, a urologist, was a colleague of late COVID-19 whistle-blower Li Wenliang, who was reprimanded by police for sounding the alarm of the virus and then died of the disease.

They both worked for the Wuhan Central Hospital.

The hospital has seen at least five of its medical workers succumb to the deadly disease. It is yet to comment on Dr Hu's reported death.

A spokesperson previously said Dr. Hu's abnormal skin tone was caused by an antibiotic he had received during the treatment.

One of Dr Hu's colleagues, Dr. Yi Fan whose skin also turned dark due to COVID-19, has fully recovered after falling ill at the same time as Dr. Hu, according to the spokesperson.

Dr Yi and Dr. Hu, both 42, caught the novel coronavirus while treating patients at the Wuhan Central Hospital in mid-January.

Both medics lying in their sickbeds with their dark skin on April 6 in Wuhan's Tongji Hospital.

Prof Duan Jun, the deputy director of the Department of Critical Care Medicine at China-Japan Friendship Hospital, said the medical team had given Dr Yi and Dr Hu Polymyxin B, a last-resort antibiotic, during their treatment.

He said the drug had caused hyper-pigmentation in the doctors' body, but the condition would slowly disappear as they recovered, according to a televised clip of the briefing.

Previously, doctors thought that their abnormal skin colour was caused by hormonal imbalances after the virus had damaged their livers.

Dr Yi and Dr Hu were both diagnosed on January 18.

The pair were taken first to the Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital and then transferred to Tongji Hospital's Zhongfa Xincheng branch, according to Chinese state broadcaster.

Dr Yi, a cardiologist, saw his condition improved after doctors had hooked him to a life-support machine called ECMO for 39 days.

Dr Hu's condition was more serious.

The urologist had been bed-bound for 99 days by late April, and his overall health was weak, said Dr Li Shusheng who treated Dr Hu.

Dr Li said he was worried about Dr Hu's mental health.

"He could not stop talking to the doctors who come to check on him," Dr Li said.

Dr Hu underwent ECMO therapy from February 7 to March 22 and regained his ability to speak on April 11. He was taken to an ordinary ward on April 14.

But the medic had a stroke on April 22. He suffered from a severe cerebral haemorrhage after that, according to The Paper.

He was sent back to the intensive care units and remained there up to his passing, the report said.

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