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Wednesday 5 November 2014

A Huge LIVE Fish Removed From A Man's Intestine Photos+Video [Warning: Graphic Content]

A man was forced to have surgery to have a live South American lungfish removed from his intestines
A Brazilian hospital is carrying out an enquiry after images appeared online of surgery where a huge fish had shot up a man’s backside and had to be removed by doctors.
The Hospital Universitario (University Hospital) in Londrina, a city in southern Brazil, confirmed that the incident was real and had happened after the man apparently decided to put the fish into his own rear as part of a bizarre sexual fantasy.
But instead of being able to pull it out again, the fish – which was a South American Lungfish and looks similar to an eel – had wriggled all the way inside and passed a considerable way through his intestines before he sought medical help.

The fish, from the family Lepidosirenidae, was surgically removed by doctors who say they have no idea how the footage ended up being leaked onto social media networks.
However the footage clearly shows many people standing in the background dressed in surgical gear and watching, with several of them also appearing to have mobile telephones recording the incident.
Doctors can be heard laughing as the fish is surgically removed and one is heard to say: “This one is for the history”, while another adds: “I have just sent the pic by mail.”
The fish was apparently still alive after being removed but had to be euthanised.
The South American Lungfish can apparently exist in areas with very little oxygen and its typical environment is swampland and slow-moving waters.

The man was forced to undergo radical surgery to have a live fish removed from his intestine. 
Graphic footage shows the man from Londrina, Brazil, having an operation to remove a South American lungfish from his body.
In the horrific clip, a surgeon pulls out the eel-like fish, known to grow up to a length of 125 cm (4.10 ft), which had apparently burrowed into the man's body.


It can be seen being taken from his abdomen and wrapped in a cloth.
Miraculously, the fish was still very much alive when it was removed - and can be seen wriggling around. 
One report suggests it was 2ft long, although this has not been verified.  
The creature later had to be euthanised, according to the Brazilian news website esmeraldanoticias.com

The unidentified man, who has recovered from the operation, has since made a formal complaint after staff at Hospital Universitário (University Hospital) in Londrina filmed the surgery.


The video of him and the fish, known locally as a piramboia, has become a viral sensation after it was posted on the website LiveLeak.
During the operation, doctors can be heard laughing as the wriggling fish is surgically removed and one is heard to say: 'This one is for the history', while another adds: 'I have just sent the pic by mail.' 
Women can be heard laughing and cheering.
The fish, which can grow up to 125 cm (4.10 ft) in length, was still very much alive when surgeons pulled it out
The fish, which can grow up to 125 cm (4.10 ft) in length, was still very much alive when surgeons pulled it out

THE SOUTH AMERICAN LUNGFISH 

The South American Lungfish can apparently exist in areas with very little oxygen and its typical environment is swampland and slow-moving waters.
It is native to the moving waters of the Amazon, Paraguay and lower Parana River basins inSouth America.
Its other names include the American mudfish and scaly salamanderfish, though it is known more commonly in Portugese as piramboia.
The young lungfish is spotted with gold on a black background, and this fades to a brown or grey colour when it grows to its adult size.
The species has an elongated, almost eel-like body which can grow to a length of 125 cm (4.10 ft).

News reports suggest Nádina Moreno, dean of the university, has now banned the use of cell phones inside the surgical centres as a result.  
In unusual and different cases, procedures are sometimes recorded without the patient being identifiable for educational purposes and for later discussion, but this should always be approved, she is reported to have said.
An inquiry investigating those responsible for recording the operation without the patient's authorisation has been launched.
Several people have were summoned to give explanations, including the physician responsible for the surgery.
A man was forced to have surgery to have a live South American lungfish removed from his intestines
Nurses are taking pictures after the surgery. CEN
Allegedly, the punishment could be a warning, suspension or even immediate dismissal.
The news comes after a man in China's southeastern Guangdong province also underwent surgery to remove a live eel from his intestines last year.
A doctor at the Shunde People's Hospital posted a photo of a one kilogram eel that was surgically removed from a patient's guts. The eel was reportedly over 50cm long. 
The 39-year-old man, refused to elaborate on how an aquatic animal ended up swimming around inside him.
The hospital launched an investigation after the operation was filmed and posted on the internet without the man's permission. People are seen laughing and cheering throughout the surgery
The hospital launched an investigation after the operation was filmed and posted on the internet without the man's permission. People are seen laughing and cheering throughout the surgery

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