Man, 56, in hospital after the fried chicken bone he accidentally swallowed ...

A man needed hospital treatment after a chicken bone he accidentally swallowed perforated his bowel.

But it did not just happen once to the unnamed 56-year-old, who suffered another perforation from the same bone two months later. 

In the first instance, doctors gave him antibiotics but didn't deem it necessary to remove the 5cm-bone.

However, when he returned eight weeks later with sudden pains and a fever it was discovered that the same bone had injured his bowel again. 

The patient underwent various surgeries while in hospital for 45 days, as the offending chicken bone caused a cascade of problems.

A 56-year-old man was rushed to hospital after a fried chicken bone he accidentally swallowed perforated his small bowel. The perforation is circled in red on CT scans

A 56-year-old man was rushed to hospital after a fried chicken bone he accidentally swallowed perforated his small bowel. The perforation is circled in red on CT scans

The unnamed man, from London, returned two months after his first treatment with sudden pains and a fever, when it was discovered that the same chicken bone had continued to injure his bowel. Pictured, a scan showing a second hole in his abdomen

The unnamed man, from London, returned two months after his first treatment with sudden pains and a fever, when it was discovered that the same chicken bone had continued to injure his bowel. Pictured, a scan showing a second hole in his abdomen 

It's not clear how the bone eventually left his body, but doctors released scans that showed it reaching the rectum. 

The man was treated by doctors led by Dr Andrew James Brown at Kingston Hospital in London. The tale was published in BMJ Case Reports.

Dr Brown said it was the first time that the same foreign body had caused a person to need hospital treatment twice for two perforations.

Writing in the journal, he said it is 'well-documented' in medical literature that fish and chicken bones can perforate the gastrointestinal tract.

However, he added: 'Here, we present the first case (to the best of our knowledge) of two separate small bowel perforations necessitating two separate hospital admissions, resulting from the same foreign body.

'Not only this, but the same foreign body passing through the bowel after making both perforations.'   

When the man first came to hospital he had pain in his stomach that had worsened over three days.

Tests revealed significantly high inflammation in the body, and a CT scan showed it was concentrated in the right upper part of the abdomen - but it was unclear why.

It was a radiographer that suggested it could be caused by a chicken bone, and the patient revealed he had enjoyed a meal of fried chicken in the days before.

Doctors found the chicken bone lying in the rectum, having migrated the entire length of the GI tract -  the food pipe, small intestine, large intestine, and rectum

Doctors found the chicken bone lying in the rectum, having migrated the entire length of the GI tract -  the food pipe, small intestine, large intestine, and rectum

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