unilad homepage
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • World News
    • Crime
    • Health
    • Money
    • Sport
    • Travel
  • Film and TV
    • Netflix
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Man dies after mosquito bite led to rare brain disease

Home> News

Published 11:36 17 Oct 2024 GMT+1

Man dies after mosquito bite led to rare brain disease

The disease has a concerningly high mortality rate for those who suffer from it

Gerrard Kaonga

Gerrard Kaonga

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: The Day/YouTube/Peter Charlesworth/LightRocket via Getty Images

Topics: News, US News, Health

Gerrard Kaonga
Gerrard Kaonga

Gerrard is a Journalist at UNILAD and has dived headfirst into covering everything from breaking global stories to trending entertainment news. He has a bachelors in English Literature from Brunel University and has written across a number of different national and international publications. Most notably the Financial Times, Daily Express, Evening Standard and Newsweek.

Advert

Advert

Advert

A man proved to be very unlucky, as one mosquito bite led to him suffering a rare brain disease that resulted in a health battle from hell for years.

The Connecticut man’s family has confirmed he has died following a harrowing five-year health battle after contracting a rare mosquito-borne virus.

Richard Pawuski, was 49 and a former personal trainer who was bitten by a mosquito back in August 2019 while he was in the woodland area behind his home.

At the time, he didn’t even know he had been bitten but after a few days, he began to exhibit serious symptoms.

Advert

Pawuski noticed a red lump and began to suffer intense headaches and was vomiting yellow bile.

Richard Pawuski and his wife Margaret before he was stricken with the illness (Amelia Pawuski)
Richard Pawuski and his wife Margaret before he was stricken with the illness (Amelia Pawuski)

After booking a doctor’s appointment, Pawuski and his family were informed on just how serious the situation was.

Mr Pawuski was diagnosed with 'Triple E' (Eastern equine encephalitis), an incurable infection.

The illness is considered rare but severe, as the disease targets the brain, causing rapid physical deterioration and lifelong disabilities if it doesn’t kill you in the first place.

An estimated 33 per cent of patients who fall significantly ill from the illness die from the infection.

The virus attacks a person’s central nervous system meaning that individuals regularly suffer from brain swelling and symptoms like confusion and seizures.

For Pawuski he would be in and out of hospitals and nursing homes for years due to the illness.

He died on Monday, October 14, seven days after being admitted into a hospice, according to the New York Post report.

Richard died seven days after being admitted to a hospice (Amelia Pawuski)
Richard died seven days after being admitted to a hospice (Amelia Pawuski)

As he was a cancer survivor and diabetic, Pawuski’s immune system was weak before he caught the disease. But the illness weakened his immune system further, leaving him particularly vulnerable to other infections.

His cause of death was listed as an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection that proved too difficult to treat, along with a traumatic brain injury, failing liver and a heart infection.

In early 2020, Pawuski explained just how difficult it was to deal with the disease and described his infection as like 'going through hell' and said he 'wouldn't wish this on anyone'.

Following his death, his 18-year-old daughter Amelia warned of just how serious the disease is. She told the post: “I’m not joking when I say your life can change in the blink of an eye, because that was what happened to us.”

While the disease is rare, it is seeing an increase in the US which scientists believe is due to warmer temperatures speeding mosquitoes’ life cycles and allowing them to spread into new areas.

Choose your content:

an hour ago
3 hours ago
6 hours ago
8 hours ago
  • Facebook/Todd Meadows
    an hour ago

    Deadliest Catch star Todd Meadows official cause of death revealed as ‘drowning with probable hypothermia’

    Meadows was filming the Discovery Channel reality series when he fell overboard

    Celebrity
  • Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
    3 hours ago

    Donald Trump speaks directly to Artemis II crew and declares ‘US is back’

    The conversation came just after the crew had broken records by travelling the farthest from Earth.

    News
  • NASA
    6 hours ago

    NASA shuts down product placement claims after jar of Nutella takes center stage on Artemis II

    The popular chocolate spread made history during the Artemis II mission.

    News
  • Gilbert Flores/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty Images
    8 hours ago

    Dax Shepard weighs in on wife Kristen Bell’s controversial anniversary post and had 'no clue' about backlash

    The couple's dark sense of humour divided fans last October - with many taking issue with a specific joke.

    Celebrity
  • Mom found to have ten brain tumors after mistaking symptoms for menopause
  • 12-year-old boy dies after contracting brain-eating amoeba at popular swimming spot
  • Parents of four daughters diagnosed with same rare brain condition reveal 'strange symptoms'
  • The Walking Dead star Kelley Mack dies aged 33 from rare brain cancer as symptoms explained