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Woman Swallows Rice Hastily, 4cm Chicken Bone Pierces Stomach Wall
pine Webmaster of Pineapple
2009/04/20 22:48
508 topics published
Update Date: 2009/04/20 13:05

A 50-year-old woman in Taichung experienced abdominal pain for three days. After seeking medical attention, she was diagnosed with peritonitis. During a laparoscopic surgery, doctors were shocked to discover a thin, toothpick-like chicken bone, approximately four centimeters long, that had pierced her stomach wall, causing pus accumulation and inflammation in the abdominal cavity. The patient admitted that, due to rushing through meals for business reasons, she might have swallowed the entire chicken bone accidentally while eating hastily.

Dr. Sun Xianbin from Cheng Ching Hospital’s Chung Kang Branch in Taichung City explained that the 50-year-old female patient had suffered from stomach pain for three days. Initially diagnosed with gastroenteritis at a nearby clinic, her condition did not improve with medication. Upon visiting the emergency department at Cheng Ching Hospital, an X-ray revealed no foreign objects, but the patient exhibited abdominal rigidity, severe pain, and a significant increase in white blood cells. She was in so much pain that she couldn’t even turn over, leading to a diagnosis of peritonitis. During the laparoscopic surgery, doctors were astonished to find a foreign object—half protruding from and half embedded in the lower part of her stomach wall—piercing through it. The perforation allowed stomach fluids and gastric acid to leak into the abdominal cavity, accumulating about 300cc of pus and causing peritoneal inflammation. The extracted object turned out to be a chicken bone.

After the surgery, the patient told doctors that she ran a grocery store and often hurried through meals when customers arrived. She speculated that she might have swallowed the small chicken bone too quickly, failing to spit it out in time, and thus ingested it along with her food.

The doctor pointed out that swallowing a four-centimeter-long chicken bone under normal eating conditions is highly unlikely and likely related to the patient’s eating habits. The public is advised to chew food thoroughly, pick out small bones from poultry or fish bones, and avoid rushing meals to prevent such injuries.

Source: http://tw. news. yahoo. com/ article/ url/ d/ a/ 090420/ 1/ 1i4xi. html
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