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Doctors pull 26-inch EEL out of a man's backside after he forced the live creature into his anus (along with a lemon)… and it started to bite his large intestine

3 months ago 18
  • Medics in Vietnam discovered eel in an X-ray as they investigated cause of pain

By Elena Salvoni

Published: 14:45 BST, 31 July 2024 | Updated: 14:54 BST, 31 July 2024

A man who stuffed a live eel up his backside was left in agony when the sharp-toothed sea creature tried to bite its way out of his digestive tract.

Horrified medics in Vietnam discovered the 26-inch long eel in X-ray scans taken to diagnose the cause of his pain on July 27, local media reports.

They found the eel had attempted to chew its way out by biting through the wall of his large intestine.

But initial attempts to remove the fish with a probe through his anus were thwarted when medics at Viet Duc Hospital, in Hanoi, found a lemon stuffed up there too.

Surgeons had to cut in through his abdomen to remove the eel with forceps, with stomach-churning pictures showing the creature on the operating table.

Grim pictures show surgeons pulling the eel from the man's body at a hospital in Hanoi, Vietnam

The 26-inch creature is pictured on the operating table - alongside a lemon that was also reportedly removed from the man's anus

Doctors manipulated the lemon back down through the patient's anus until it popped out before stitching up the hole in his intestine and cleaning out leaked faecal matter.

Medics say he would have died without treatment and will have to live with a colostomy bag for the rest of his life.

Hospital officials have not named the patient and only identified him as a 31-year-old Indian national.

Hospital Deputy Director of the Center for Colon and Rectal Surgery Dr Le Nhat Huy said they had performed many surgeries to remove foreign objects from patients' anuses.

He told local media how they had removed everything from glass bottles to sex toys.

But this was, he said, the first time they had had to remove a live animal.

Dr Huy warned: 'Eels are animals that can survive in anaerobic conditions for a long time and can puncture the digestive tract.

'People should absolutely not insert animals through their anus to create a strong sensation, as the consequences can be severe.'

Experts say that as long as they are damp and out of direct sunlight eels can survive many days out of water.

Picture shows the lemon inside the man's rectum. He is said to have been an Indian national in his 30s

Doctors manipulated the lemon back down through the patient's anus until it popped out before stitching up the hole in his intestine

Horrified medics in Vietnam discovered the 26-inch long eel in X-ray scans taken to diagnose the cause of his pain on July 27

Disturbingly, it's not the first time that surgeons have had to remove the critter from  a person's insides.

In March, a 34-year-old man from the northern Quang Ninh Province, Vietnam, was admitted to hospital with severe abdominal cramps after complaining of stomach aches.

Local media claims he was given an X-ray and an ultrasound, which showed he had a foreign body lurking in his abdomen.

It had caused him intestinal perforation and peritonitis — a life-threatening complication when the tissue lining the abdomen becomes swollen.

The patient was given urgent surgery to remove the mystery object - which the shocked surgeons discovered was a 30-cm long live eel.

A Vietnamese man, 34, left surgeons horrified after they pulled out a foot-long eel from his belly during an operation 

The eel was believed to have entered the patient's body by entering his anus, sliding up his colon, and biting through his intestine

When quizzed about how the eel could have ended up in his belly, the patient couldn't provide an answer.

But medics believe it entered his anus, slid up his colon and somehow entered his abdomen.

Items can leak out of the intestines and into the bowel if patients suffer intestinal perforation.

What stunned the doctors most was that the eel was still alive when they removed it.

Doctor Pham Manh Hung told local media: 'This is a rare case, the rectum is a site with abundant faecal matter and prone to infection.

'However, the surgery was performed safely.'

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