Previously, patient D.T.L, 33 years old in Phu Tho, was admitted to the hospital with severe abdominal pain in the right subcutaneous fat, mild fever, pain in the abdomen and abdominal failure.
Test results showed a high white blood cell index (12G/L), leading to an initial diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
The patient said he often ate fish. The morning before being hospitalized, he ate fish noodles, then had a dull pain in the epigastric region. Thinking that he had stomach pain (due to a history of stomach pain), he took medicine but it did not improve. At noon of the same day, the pain moved down to the lower abdomen. By the afternoon, the pain became more and more intense and he had to go to a clinic near the doctor and was diagnosed with intestinal motile irritation and the possibility of excess enteritis and was scheduled for monitoring. After that, the pain did not improve, Mr. L was taken by his family to the Central Hospital for Tropical Diseases.
At the Center for Geopharmac surgery - Digestive Based on the results of tests, ultrasounds, catzes and clinical monitoring, the patient was diagnosed with non-perturbed intestines due to foreign objects and was scheduled for emergency surgery that night. During the surgery, the surgical team discovered that the patient's abdomen had a lumpy fever and was severely infected. Subtractive framework, excess intestines in the pelvic cavity have thrombitis. A vehicle's abscess in the small intestine is located about 1 meter from the throbbing angle, caused by a 4cm long piece of fish bone puncture in the small intestine. 10cm away, there was a large bag of excess Meckel.
Doctors removed the inflamed excess intestines, removed the small intestine containing the excess sacs and abs, and cleaned the abs. After 2 days of surgery, the patient recovered well.
Dr. Nguyen Minh Trong, Director of the Center for Geotherapy - Digestive Surgery, said: "A majority of cases of swallowing fish bones and foreign objects are naturally excreted. However, with abnormal fish bones, they can stick into the wall of the small intestine and gradually become deeply punched, causing inflammation and pain, forming abscesses".