Today's Medical Mysterie
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wrote on 2 Jun 2024, 22:18 last edited by
@George-K said in Today's Medical Mysterie:
Thanks. What did I do wrong?
I'm guessing the author posted the answer, then deleted, and posted another tweet; so the link you posted is no longer valid.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 00:21 last edited by
Really? Crayons & a toothbrush?! Well I messed up bad.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 00:28 last edited by
@blondie said in Today's Medical Mysterie:
Really? Crayons & a toothbrush?! Well I messed up bad.
Yeah, I didn't realize that they were long items. I'm surprised they're radiopaque.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 00:37 last edited by blondie 6 Mar 2024, 00:39
https://appliedradiology.com/articles/what-crayons-look-like-on-ct-and-mr-images Picture C explains the gremlins. I don’t have access to the study, but thank goodness crayons are radiopaque. It’s not uncommon for kids to eat, swallow crayons, or stick them in their noses & ears.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 01:29 last edited by
I'm amazed that no surgery was needed to extract all those foreign objects.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 02:20 last edited by
@Axtremus said in Today's Medical Mysterie:
I'm amazed that no surgery was needed to extract all those foreign objects.
Interventional GI medicine has been transformative.
One of the horrors I used to see, early in my career, was the upper GI bleeder. This was usually a patient who had esophageal varices (think varicose veins in the esophagus) due to alcoholic cirrhosis. If one of these veins started to bleed, it was a nightmare.
Similarly, a bleeding stomach ulcer.
With the maturity of upper GI endoscopy, most of these can be treated via an endoscope and some judiciously placed cautery.
That said, snagging a foreign body with an endoscope is not a BFD. Pretty routine, actually.
Looking at the "bottom side," you have to wonder how many pre-cancerous colon polyps were snagged avoiding the need for a colon resection for colon carcinoma. @bachophile probably knows more about this than I do, but toward the end of my career, it seemed like we were doing fewer colon resections than we did in 1980.
Great case, no?
Sam Ghali posts a lot of interesting video on his X feed. Most of them would appeal to medical geeks (funky EKGs, etc). However, I thought this would be fun to share.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 08:48 last edited by
Wow! Interesting. After hearing the answer, I am wondering if stomach acid is strong enough to dissolve wax. I guess not.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 11:18 last edited by
In the comments: "Had a patient like that in residency except what they ate caused the bowel to perf(orate). Found everything in their peritoneum from pencils to juice box straws."
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 15:30 last edited by
I thought also metallic. Maybe there is lead in crayons? Anyway yes colon cancer incidence has been dropping but early onset colon cancer meaning younger than say 50 is on the rise and no one knows why and that why the age for screening colonoscopies which used to be 50 is now dropping to 45 or earlier if u have a family history.
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 15:54 last edited by
btw i once operated an incarcerated inguinal hernia, and in the hernia sac i felt something sharp--turned out to be a pencil which perforated the sigmoid colon and was stuck in the hernia. also a schizophrenic.
must be something in writing instruments which attracts crazies.
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btw i once operated an incarcerated inguinal hernia, and in the hernia sac i felt something sharp--turned out to be a pencil which perforated the sigmoid colon and was stuck in the hernia. also a schizophrenic.
must be something in writing instruments which attracts crazies.
wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 16:01 last edited by@bachophile said in Today's Medical Mysterie:
must be something in writing instruments which attracts crazies.
https://nodebb.the-new-coffee-room.club/topic/31671/pen-ink-paper/27
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wrote on 3 Jun 2024, 16:04 last edited by
Someone commented: dx: HIPPA Violation
Wrong since it’s de-identified, but funny all the same.