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A man who shoved a coconut into his bum needed to get it yanked out by surgeons.
The constipated 56-year-old, who wasn't identified, waited two days before seeking medical attention.
But the man from Taiwan did not confess why he used the fruit in the first place.
Writing in the British Journal of Surgery, medics claimed that he had been unable to urinate and complained of severe abdominal pain.
Upon examination, scans showed the fruit was lodged in his rectum, compressing his urethra and preventing him from urinating.
Writing in the British Journal of Surgery, medics claimed he had been unable to urinate and complained of severe abdominal pain. Upon examination CT scans showed the fruit was lodged in his rectum compressing the urethra and preventing him from urinating
The constipated 56-year-old, who wasn't named, waited two days before seeking medical attention
The date of the incident was not revealed in the case report by medics at E-Da Hospital in Kaohsiung City, located in the south of the country. The coconut, measuring 9cm in length, was then extracted via laparotomy — an operation that involves opening the abdomen
A 2021 study by The Royal College of Surgeons of England, found the incidence of objects having to be removed from rectums by the NHS is on the rise. Cases were growing particularly quickly among men
The date of the incident was not revealed in the case report by medics at E-Da Hospital in Kaohsiung City, located in the south of the country.
The coconut, measuring 9cm in length, was then extracted via laparotomy — an operation that involves opening the abdomen.
Medics did not reveal when the man was discharged.
Laparotomy procedures, however, often involve a hospital stay of up to five days and a recovery period of between six to eight weeks, according to the NHS.
Reports in medical literature of objects being stuck in intimate areas date back to the 16th century.
As well as corks, other objects reportedly recovered by medics over the years include plastic aerosol caps, a plastic cup and even a child’s toy.
NHS doctors are no stranger to dealing with similar incidents, with data analysis last year finding about 400 'foreign' objects are pulled from English anuses each year.
This was estimated to cost the taxpayer roughly £340,000 a year for things like drugs for performing procedures, and the manpower of NHS staff.
But the insertion of objects into a rectum, also known as anal play, carries a number of risks.
As well as getting stuck objects, they can also potentially perforate the bowel which can be deadly as material from the digestive tract can spill into other parts of the body, causing an infection.