Weird: Doctors remove 40 knives from man's stomach
Doctors found fully-extended
foldable knives
THE CORPORATE HOSPITAL, AMRITSAR via CNN |
A man in India spent two
months swallowing knives and had 40 of them surgically removed from his
stomach, according to the doctor who led the operation.
"He had a wild urge to consume metal.
Even for us, the experienced surgeons, it was frightening," Dr. Jatinder
Malhotra told CNN.
"We were so nervous... a small mistake
could have taken the patient's life. In my 20 years of practice, I have never
seen anything like it."
Malhotra said it took his team about two days
to form a diagnosis and surgery plan.
The five-hour operation took place Friday in
the northern Indian city of Amritsar, a Sikh holy city in the state of Punjab.
Malhotra said they found foldable knives,
which when fully extended were about seven inches long.
"He [the patient] says he swallowed some
knives folded, and some unfolded. When we took out the knives -- some were
found folded, some were open, and some had even started rusting and were
broken," Malhotra said.
The patient, a 42-year-old father of two,
told CNN he's feeling much better.
"I'm sorry I let my family down. I'll be
forever thankful to doctors and hospital staff for saving my life," he
said.
Malhotra says the patient is now "out of
danger" and is set to be discharged in a couple of days.
He won't be discharged until he's cleared by
psychiatrists, which is set to happen in a couple of days, two doctors at the
hospital told CNN.
But the big question remains -- why did he
start eating knives?
"I don't know why I used to swallow
knives," the patient told CNN. "I just enjoyed its taste and I was
addicted ... how people get addicted to alcohol and other things, my situation
was similar."
Malhotra believes the patient has a very rare
mental disorder that most likely has not been published in any international
medical journal.
The patient is currently under the continuous
supervision of the hospital's in-house psychiatric team and will soon be
visited by independent mental health experts, doctors said.
The patient told doctors that he has no idea
why he started eating knives but that he "developed a taste for
metal" and "loved the way blades tasted."
The patient even managed to keep his habit
secret from his family, according to Malhotra.
Now, Malhotra says, the patient claims he
won't even touch a knife anymore.
"I will never do such acts ever
again," the patient said. "I'm a new person now."
If the urge does strike, Malhotra and his
team gave him some advice -- "we told him if you ever feel like you need
more iron in your body, try spinach."
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