Nose Leeches
Health: On a lighter note, I’ve been getting through my last two
weeks mail and RSS data, and came across this beauty.
It’s a truly venerable internet urban legend — the
href=http://www.petting-zoo.net/~deadbeef/archive/3624.html>Nepalese Nose
Leech story. Even given that I assumed it was more than
likely a UL, I still took care not to drink from streams when
I visited leech-infested areas, especially in Nepal!
Well, it appears it may not be a UL after all –
Doctors have removed a leech from the nose of a 55-year-old Hong Kong
woman after she swam and washed her face in a stream, a medical journal
reported.The woman went to her doctor complaining of nose bleeds and an
occasional sensation that something was blocking her left nostril, the
Hong Kong Medical Journal said in its April issue. Her family doctor
noticed a brownish mass in her nostril but couldn’t remove it because
of heavy bleeding, the journal said.The patient was taken to the emergency room, where doctors identified
the problem as a bloodsucking leech. They had trouble pulling it out
because the 2 inch invertebrate retracted into the nostril and
disappeared, the journal said.Part of the slimy leech was in a passage of her nasal cavity and a
larger segment was in her sinus cavity, the article said.Doctors used a nasal spray to anesthetize the dark brown leech that had
a sucker on the front part of its body. After two minutes, the leech
moved slowly out of the antrum (sinus) and was retrieved with forceps,
the journal said.The woman said that one month before her symptoms developed, she swam
and washed her face in a stream while hiking. Doctors checked other
members of her hiking group and found another leech in the nose of a man
who washed his face in the stream, the journal said.
Link via jwz,
href=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/n/a/2005/04/08/international/i130958D54.DTL>AP
wire story,
href=http://www.hkmj.org.hk/hkmj/abstracts/v11n2/110.htm>abstract at Hong
Kong Medical Journal site,
href=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15815064>MEDLINE
abstract, including a line noting ‘this form of leech infestation has
not been previously reported’ — except on teh internets!
source: Nose Leeches
