[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Warning -- really disturbing



Trust me -- you do not want to read this or view the pictures at the end of the links if you are squeamish.

On the other hand, if you believe you think you know the most stupid things a person can do, you need to read this, because it is even more bizarre than anything you can imagine.


Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2003 12:38:01 -0500 (EST)
From: nev@bostic.com
Subject: Dude gets an ingrown hair. [Possibly offensive: GV]
Forwarded-by: "Rob 'Commander' Pike" <r@google.com>

Dear Friends -

Since there seemed some interest and amazement at the story of the
ingrown-hair-gone-bad which came to the Stanford ER, I have attached for
your viewing pleasure (?!?!) the relevant photos. They are reasonably
disturbing. People really do this, and only a human being would or
could.  This gentleman *walked* in to the ER.

The first photo (eroded-cranial-wound.jpg) gives you a perspective view,
and the second (maggots-in-brain.jpg) shows our white larva friends
going to work on his cerebrum.

Dude gets an ingrown hair. It gets infected, now he has a boil. Ought
to go to the doc and get it lanced, but he doesn't. Weeks pass. The boil
grows, eroding downward toward his skull. Ought to go to the hospital
in a jiffy, but he doesn't. Weeks pass. The infection reaches his skull.
Bone, once infected, presents little barrier to spread of infection to
contiguous bone, and so it spreads within his skull. Ought to spend a
good long time in the hospital, but he doesn't. The bone dies, and
begins to erode. Weeks pass. At some point, the smell attracts flies,
which begin to lay eggs in his festering wound, and maggots take hold.
Weeks pass. The infection breaches the inner layer of his skull, and
reaches the meninges. Weeks pass. Though their tensile strength is
impressive, the meninges are quite thin, and the infection breaches
them. Now, infection and maggots set to work on his brain. Your brain
just isn't supposed to be on your outside, and presents almost no
barrier to anything when exposed. Infection and maggots get to work on
his brain. This makes him feel a little wobbly on his feet, and so, what
do you know, he decides to see the doctor. He walks in to the Stanford
ER, where these photos were taken, just as you see him here.

The pix:

http://gelatinous.com/danh/temp/Absolute_Worst_Thing_Ever/eroded-cranial-wound.jpg
http://gelatinous.com/danh/temp/Absolute_Worst_Thing_Ever/maggots-in-brain.jpg