Sunday, August 26, 2018

Word of the day: MEGARECTUM

                                                          Constipated man nearly died after feces-filled bowel burst (I am not laughing about this).



A man almost died after his bowel became so full with feces it burst and caused his organs to start shutting down.
The 24-year-old was taken to the hospital after suffering with tummy pain and diarrhea for a week.
The patient, who is autistic, had a history of chronic constipation and had been admitted to the hospital a number of times over the last four years.
Examination showed he had a tender, swollen abdomen with minimal bowel sounds.
A CT-scan revealed he had a megarectum - a condition which causes the colon to dilate.
His rectum had dilated up to 18-cm inside his body and was "filled with feces", according to the BMJ case report.
He was given oral laxatives but refused regular enemas to clear his bowels.
Two days later he returned to Newham University Hospital in London suffering inflammation in the stomach and reduced consciousness.
Further tests revealed his blood was becoming too acidic and his kidneys were starting to fail.
A second CT-scan found a "substantial perforation" of his bowel and he was rushed into surgery where doctors were able to close the tear.
The operation was successful and the man made a full recovery after being kept in intensive care.
"This patient had chronic, idiopathic megacolon and megarectum," Dr. Alexandros Apostolopoulos, who treated the man, wrote in the report. "Patients with this condition report recurrent episodes of constipation, abdominal pain, distension and bloating starting in childhood or adolescence."
"Due to increased intraluminal [gastrointestinal] pressures, these patients are at an increased risk of ulceration of the bowel wall," Apostolopoulos wrote. "Hence, they are at an increased risk of perforation."
Megacolon and megarectum are often treated with enemas and oral laxatives.
If these methods fail, surgery may be needed to correct the bowel to prevent serious complications.


9 comments:

  1. Allow me to be the first to say HOLY SHIT!

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  2. Isn't this what pretty much killed elvis? Asking for a friend.

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    1. I believe so. His was also known as the "King Kong Kommode Choker" type.

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  3. Chagas disease:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagas_disease
    Endemic to turdworld nations to the south and increasing in numbers here thanks to democrap/RINO open border types.

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    1. Chagas is common in tropical areas South of the border, but it is not contagious person-to-person except by transfusion, organ transplants, or childbirth. It's most often spread by an insect called the "kissing bug" that lives in the cracks and crevices or ceiling rafters of rural homes, and drops onto people's faces while they're sleeping. People can also be infected by food or drink contaminated by the insect's feces. The kissing bug's habitat has been spreading North because of climate change - not immigration policies! Of course, immigrants who are already infected will need to be treated, but they cannot spread chagas to anyone else except their own newborn infant. Chagas can be cured shortly after infection, but most American doctors would not screen for it. Chronic cases can only be managed.

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  4. I believe we dodged a bullet there - we could have had another barry soetero...

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