Chinese doctors critically ill with COVID-19 wake up with darkened skin

Wuhan doctors who were critically ill with coronavirus wake up to find that their skin has turned dark after virus damaged their liver

  • Dr Yi and Dr Hu were left fighting for their lives after catching the virus at work
  • Doctors saved them by hooking them to a life-support machine called ECMO
  • Change of their skin tone is caused by hormonal imbalances due to liver damage 
  • Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID

Two Chinese doctors who were critically ill with COVID-19 have seen their skin turned dark after being brought back from the brink of death.

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

Their abnormal skin colour is caused by hormonal imbalances after their livers were damaged by the virus, their doctor told Chinese state media.

He is seen after being revived in a clip released by Beijing Satellite TV

Dr Yi (pictured on the left before falling ill) beat COVID-19 after being hooked to a life-support machine for 39 days. He is seen after being revived in a clip released by Beijing Satellite TV

Dr Hu (pictured before falling ill) has been bed-bound for 99 days and was undergoing ECMO therapy for 45 days

His overall health is weak, his doctor told state media

Dr Hu (pictured on the left before falling ill) has been bed-bound for 99 days and was undergoing ECMO therapy for 45 days. His overall health is weak, his doctor told state media

Dr Yi and Dr Hu are colleagues with late whistle-blower Li Wenliang, who was punished for sounding the alarm of the virus and then died of the disease on February 7.

The two medics were both diagnosed on January 18. They were taken first to the Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital and then transferred twice, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.

Dr Yi, a cardiologist, beat COVID-19 after doctors hooked him to a life-support machine called ECMO for 39 days.

ECMO is a drastic life-support procedure which replaces the function of the heart and lungs by pumping oxygen into the blood outside the body.

Dr Yi and Dr Hu were saved by a life-support machine called ECMO. The picture shows medical staff treating a critical patient with an ECMO at the Red Cross hospital in Wuhan on March 1

Dr Yi and Dr Hu were saved by a life-support machine called ECMO. The picture shows medical staff treating a critical patient with an ECMO at the Red Cross hospital in Wuhan on March 1

Speaking to CCTV from his hospital bed today, Dr Yi said he had largely recovered.

He said he could move in bed normally, but was still struggling to walk independently.

Dr Yi confessed that the ordeal of battling the deadly disease had, to a certain degree, traumatised him.

He told a reporter: ‘When I first gained conscious, especially after I got to know about my condition, I felt scared. I had nightmares often.’

He said he gradually overcome the psychological hurdle after doctors comforted him and arranged counselling for him.

He is now being looked after in an ordinary ward in Wuhan’s China-Japan Friendship Hospital.

Dr Yi, a cardiologist, and Dr Hu, a urologist, work for the Wuhan Central Hospital. The file photo show a doctor checking the condition of a COVID-19 patients in Wuhan on February 13

Dr Yi, a cardiologist, and Dr Hu, a urologist, work for the Wuhan Central Hospital. The file photo show a doctor checking the condition of a COVID-19 patients in Wuhan on February 13

Dr Hu’s condition was more serious.

The urologist has been bed-bound for 99 days and his overall health is 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 is still being looked after in the intensive care units in the same hospital as Dr Yi.

Dr Li suspected that the two medics’ skin turned dark due to a type of medicine they had received at the beginning of the treatment.

He added that one of the drug’s side effects is the darkening of the skin colour. He did not name the drug.

Dr Li expected both medics’ skin colour to return to normal after the function of their livers improves.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk