The terrifying rise of a flesh-eating bacteria that thrives in warm coastal waters has claimed four more lives, this time in Louisiana, bringing the national death toll to eight for 2025.
Health officials confirmed that the culprit is Vibrio vulnificus, a naturally occurring bacterium found in warm, brackish water that can invade the body through open wounds, rapidly destroying skin and soft tissue, according to the Daily Mail.
The infection starts with pain, redness, and swelling, but can quickly turn gruesome — as the flesh begins to blacken and die. In severe cases, the bacteria enters the bloodstream and causes sepsis, a deadly condition that can spiral into multi-organ failure.
“Vibrio vulnificus can cause particularly severe and even highly fatal infections,” warned Theresa Sokol, an epidemiologist at the Louisiana Department of Health, in an interview with Fox 8. “We feel like there is an overall increased risk right now. All of those individuals had severe illnesses, and they all required hospitalization.”
Louisiana, which typically sees about one death per year from the bacteria, has now reported four fatalities and 17 hospitalizations in just the first half of 2025. Officials have not released names, ages, or the specific locations of the infections, nor have they confirmed whether any of the deceased had underlying conditions.
Sokol revealed that 75 percent of patients were believed to have been infected through open wounds, many likely sustained while swimming in warm water. However, Vibrio can also infect people who eat contaminated shellfish, causing severe gastrointestinal symptoms like diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain — and even death if the infection spreads internally.
Dr. David Janz, associate chief medical officer at a Louisiana hospital, underscored the danger: “I personally will take care of sometimes two or three patients a year that have this infection. We certainly see it, but it is not a common infection. Twenty-five percent, or about one in four of those patients, will end up dying from this infection, which is a pretty high number.”
The latest deaths in Louisiana follow four similar fatalities in Florida earlier this month, bringing the total number of confirmed infections to 32 between the two Gulf states.
The surge is being blamed on rising sea temperatures — with surface waters in the Gulf now reaching 85°F (29°C), the perfect breeding ground for the deadly bacteria. And it’s not just the South anymore: cases were reported last year in New York, Connecticut, and North Carolina, suggesting the bacteria is creeping northward as coastal waters warm.
In some cases, amputation is the only way to save a patient’s life.
One such example is Debbie King, a 72-year-old Floridian who needed her leg amputated after a minor cut from climbing onto a boat turned into a life-threatening Vibrio infection. Within three days, her leg had swollen, blistered, and blackened — forcing doctors to act fast. They told her if they hadn’t removed the leg, she would have died.
The CDC estimates 150 to 200 Vibrio vulnificus cases are reported in the U.S. each year — and one in five patients do not survive.
With the Gulf heating up and infections rising, officials are sounding the alarm: if you have an open wound, stay out of warm coastal waters — and if you’re eating raw shellfish, know the risks.














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