TG盗号系统企业破解技术|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|飞机盗号软件VIP破解技术✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨New York woman's body develops terrible burns due to allergic reaction to common antibiotic

A New York City woman lost her eyesight for months and had horrific burns after suffering an allergic reaction to a common medication, The Daily Mail reports.
Stella Shon—a healthy and active 24-year-old at the time—went to the hospital after struggling with brain fog and aches so bad she couldn't walk even a few blocks.
Doctors thought she had a bacterial infection and prescribed her the antibiotic amoxicillin, but shortly after taking her first dose collapsed in intense feverish pain as a rash erupted on her forearms and cheek.
Then her eyelids crusted over and the rash turned to massive blisters that covered her head and torso. Her skin also started to peel off.
Shon was taken to the ER where she was diagnosed with Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS), a rare and serious disorder where the immune system sparks widespread inflammation in response to a medication.
The disease starts as a flu-like illness, followed by a painful rash that spreads and blisters—before the top layer of skin dies and falls off.
It is fatal in about ten percent of cases, but for those who develop the severe form—like Shon—this rises to 50 percent.
Doctors could not pinpoint which medication caused her illness, but said it could have been the amoxicillin—or even the Advil and Tylenol she had taken earlier to treat her flu symptoms.
Antibiotics are a common risk factor for the disease, according to a 2025 study in JAMA Dermatology. In the disease, the immune system mistakenly identifies the medication as harmful and launches an attack—leading to widespread inflammation and the detachment of skin.
Shon has now been advised to avoid all three medications, which she said has left her with few other ways to manage pain.