A UK MP returned to parliament, five months after losing his hands and feet to sepsis, receiving loud applause from colleagues and praise from the prime minister.
Craig Mackinlay, 57, said he wanted to be known as the first "bionic MP" as he returned to the House of Commons with prosthetic legs and hands following the life-threatening episode last year.
"This is an emotional day for me," he said, joking about how his new limbs meant he was breaking parliament's dress code by wearing trainers and no formal jacket.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said Mr Mackinlay was an inspiration and Speaker Lindsay Hoyle called him "the man of the moment".
Mr Mackinlay, who represents Mr Sunak's Conservative Party, has said he will campaign to make sure sepsis, which advances rapidly, is recognised earlier.
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In sepsis, the immune system overreacts to an infection and the body starts damaging its own organs. The UK Sepsis Trust says it kills five people every hour in Britain.
Mr Mackinlay said that he went to bed on 17 September feeling unwell, and that within a day his body had turned blue.
He spent 16 days in an induced coma, waking to find his arms and legs had turned black. All were amputated last December.
He has learnt to walk again but says there are many difficult moments, especially on waking up every morning.
"You're in the 'land of nod' having a nice dream, and then you wake up and it's: 'I haven't got any hands'," he told the BBC.
Mr Mackinlay started his political career in the early 1990s, briefly leading the United Kingdom Independence Party (Ukip) before leaving to join the Conservative Party in 2005.
He has also said he is determined to fight the next election in his Kent constituency, due to be renamed Thanet East.