News / International
Surgeons remove 22.9cm fork from man's stomach TEN years after he swallowed it
18 Aug 2012 at 04:42hrs | Views
Surgeons in the United Kingdom have removed a 22.9cm fork which was lodged in a man's stomach for a decade.
Lee Gardner, who was vomiting blood and had stomach cramps, told surgeons in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, he had accidentally swallowed the 22.9cm fork a decade ago.
But Mr Gardner, 40, said he had forgotten he had eaten it as doctors at the time assured him it would pass through his system naturally.
"When they were looking inside me with the camera, the doctor said 'Are you sure you've not swallowed anything?'," he told the Barnsley Chronicle.
"I said no but when he said 'Are you sure? I can see prongs of what appears to be a fork', I remembered accidentally swallowing one years and years ago."
Mr Gardner said he was playing around with a plastic fork in his mouth and gagged, accidentally swallowing it, but it had never caused him problems.
Doctors at Barnsley Hospital found that the prongs had pressed on the stomach lining causing an ulcer that led to the bleeding.
Consultant general surgeon Hanis Shiwani said it would have been too dangerous to try to remove the object without surgery and carried out a 45-minute operation to cut open Mr Gardner's stomach.
Mr Gardner, who was discharged from hospital this week, is expected to make a full recovery.
Lee Gardner, who was vomiting blood and had stomach cramps, told surgeons in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, he had accidentally swallowed the 22.9cm fork a decade ago.
But Mr Gardner, 40, said he had forgotten he had eaten it as doctors at the time assured him it would pass through his system naturally.
"When they were looking inside me with the camera, the doctor said 'Are you sure you've not swallowed anything?'," he told the Barnsley Chronicle.
Mr Gardner said he was playing around with a plastic fork in his mouth and gagged, accidentally swallowing it, but it had never caused him problems.
Doctors at Barnsley Hospital found that the prongs had pressed on the stomach lining causing an ulcer that led to the bleeding.
Consultant general surgeon Hanis Shiwani said it would have been too dangerous to try to remove the object without surgery and carried out a 45-minute operation to cut open Mr Gardner's stomach.
Mr Gardner, who was discharged from hospital this week, is expected to make a full recovery.
Source - Mirror