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Grad student loses arm after being mauled by stray dog she took in: ‘I danced with the devil’

An Arizona animal lover says she screamed for nearly 30 minutes as she was mauled by a stray dog she took in – eventually losing an arm that was “chewed out.”

Kalista Munoz, 25, is only now opening up about the July attack that left her in a coma for several days and need🐓ing 18 surgeries, including the amputation of her mangled right arm.

“I always say I danced with the devil and I looked him in the eyes,” Munoz .

The student was already caring for several other f⛄oster animals when she agreed to help Zona, a stray found by a friend. Zona ꦰgave her no trouble for three months until he got into a fight with one of her other pooches.

“He escaped from my room, which is where he was. He had a cone on, but wi𒈔th no hesitation, he darted🦩 downstairs,” she recalled.

Kalista Munoz, a 25-year-old grad student in Arizona, has opened up about losing an arm after she was attacked by a dog she fostered. AZ Family/Arizona News
Munoz has undergone 18 surgeries since she was mauled by the dog in July 2023. AZ Family/Arizona News

In a🎀 panic, Munoz tried to drag Zona🐭 into a bathroom.

“I eventually got trapped in there. And by the time I could grab the door, unfortunately, this part of my arm was already chewed out,” she said, pointing to where her right arm now ends just below the𝓡 elbow.

Munoz scream💎ed for help for nearly 30 minutes 💫before her neighbor called police.

“I always say I danced with the devil and I looked him in the eyes,” Munoz said of the stray, seen here. AZ Family/Arizona News

Still, “I knew I wasn’t going to die like this,” she said.

She spent a month in the hospital, where she also was in a coma for several days, but eventually needed to have her mangled aﷺrm amputated due to an infection.

The report did not say what breed the s꧅trﷺay was, not what happened to Zona after the attack.

Muno𓂃z said: “He was a really good dog but something was abused and imprinted in him.”

Munoz spent a month in the hospital, where she also was in a coma for several days. AZ Family/Arizona News
“There’s beauty in tragedy,” she said. AZ Family/Arizona News

Six months after the life-changing atta🧜ck, Mu♉noz said there are still days where she thinks, “Why can’t I just have my hand back?”

But she remains sanguine and doesn’t let the experience delay her plans as she pursues a master’s degree in social justice at ℱArizona State University.

“I shouldn’t have to postpone my life anymore because something ba𒉰d happened to me. There’s beauty in tragedy, you know, and I believe that my journey is🌃 someone else’s survival guide.”

Munoz is pursuing a master’s degree at Arizona State University. GoFundMe

Following the attack, her friend🌠 CJ Norrick created a GoFundMe page, which 💖has collected nearly $10,000.

“Kalista is a sweet soul with a big smile and an even bigger heart,” Norrick wrote in the fundraiser. “If she ever won the lottery, there definitely would be clear siജgns … because every dog & cat would be saved from every animal shelter. To say the least, this woman is a hardcore animal lover.”