They Removed the Scar Tissue and Read “Hamburger”

Posted by Miss Cellania in Medicine on September 17, 2009 at 11:38 pm


John Manley of Wilmington, North Carolina suffered frequent pneumonia and coughing spells for over a year before the real culprit was found: there was a jagged inch-long piece of plastic lodged in his left lung. It turned out to be part of a utensil from Wendy’s Hamburgers. Manley was referred to Dr. Momen Wahidi, director of interventional pulmonology at Duke University for removal of the object.

Wahidi said Manley’s case presented challenges because so much scar tissue had formed around the object. But he was soon able to uncover more and more of the mystery item. He called out letters — an A, a B, a U, an R.

“We figured out during the case that it was saying hamburger,” Wahidi says. “But why would something that says hamburger be in this patient’s body?”

Manley thinks he probably inhaled the plastic when he gulped a drink. He now drinks with a straw. Link -via Terra Sigillata


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COMMENT

8 comments to "They Removed the Scar Tissue and Read “Hamburger”"

  1. Gauldar
    September 18th, 2009 at 10:37 am

    I doubt that's what happened, he was probably doing something stupid or trying to win a bet.

  2. Miss Cellania
    September 18th, 2009 at 10:49 am

    Gauldar, if he had any idea what was causing his problems all this time, he would've admitted it to his doctors.

  3. Lady Helena Handbasket
    September 18th, 2009 at 11:01 am

    This story isn't finished yet. The denouement comes when an old friend sees him in Wendy's and slaps him on the back, and he dies from blood loss due to a sudden tonsilectomy with a straw.

  4. ~April
    September 18th, 2009 at 11:41 am

    I'm a respiratory therapist and yes, you can aspirate food, vomit, etc into the lungs. Haven't you heard the phrase, 'went down the wrong pipe'? If it's a liquid, it will be absorbed into the body, but a solid will not. Aspiration pneumonia is often the result. I've witness several bronchoscopies where foreign objects were found, much to the surprise of the patient.

  5. FishBottleT
    September 19th, 2009 at 10:45 am

    Yikes that is scary. One more reason not to eat fast food.

  6. Gauldar
    September 19th, 2009 at 11:43 am

    @Miss Cellania

    If you want to take everyone for their word, that's no problem, but there is always more to the story.

    http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=dcf_1225503127

    My question is, how do you gulp a soda and get a fragment of plastic in your lungs without choking?

    @FishBottleT

    Let me tell you a story about a restaurant called the PickleBarrel. A friend of mine went there with her friends, and she ordered the pasta. When it was served, she noticed a glinting from the lights shining down on it, and upon examining it found they were shards of broken glass. She got the attention of the waitress, and told her, and the waitresses eyes go wide open and say "Oh my god, theres broken glass in it!?". She was asked if she wanted anything else from the menu on the house, but she had lost her appetite.

  7. Noelegy
    September 20th, 2009 at 5:31 pm

    Gauldar, I ordered a dessert (zabaglione, as I recall) from an Italian chain restaurant, and there was a piece of broken glass in it. Fortunately, I saw this before taking a bite. My experience with informing the server was about the same as your friend's. They offered to replace the dessert, but I was suddenly no longer in the mood for it.

  8. Noelegy
    September 20th, 2009 at 5:32 pm

    P.S. "Frequent pneumonia"? Having had double pneumonia only once in my life, sheesh. I cannot imagine having it again and again.


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