Awani International
  • LIVE
  • Videos
  • US-China
  • BRICS-RT
  • ASEAN
  • West Asia
  • Shows
  • Podcast
  • BM
    EN
  • LIVE
  • Login
  • BM
    EN
  • LIVE
  • Login
Awani International
  • LIVE
  • Videos
  • US-China
  • BRICS-RT
  • ASEAN
  • West Asia
  • Shows
  • Podcast
Trump's Greenland threat puts Europe Inc back in tariff crosshairs
Europe won't be 'blackmailed' by Trump tariffs, says Danish PM
Trump tells Norway he no longer feels obligation to think only of peace
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • INVESTOR

Astro AWANI | Copyright © 2025 Measat Broadcast Network Systems Sdn Bhd 199201008561 (240064-A)

Surgical forceps removed from man's abdomen after 18 years

Reuters
Reuters
03/01/2017
10:10 MYT
Surgical forceps removed from man's abdomen after 18 years
Over the past year in Vietnam, there have been two cases of doctors operating on wrong limbs, and three cases of men being diagnosed as pregnant.
Doctors in Vietnam have removed surgical forceps from a man who unknowingly carried them inside his body for 18 years, national television VTV reported.
Ma Van Nhat, 54, said the forceps had probably been left in his abdomen in 1998 when he had emergency surgery after a traffic accident.
Nhat had felt only the occasional pain and a clinic had given him medicine for a suspected stomach ulcer. An X-ray taken late last year showed the forceps were to blame.
The 15 cm (six inch) long instrument had broken apart and become lodged in Nhat's stomach. They were removed in an operation.
The director of Bac Kan Hospital, Trinh Thi Luong, told VTV that officials were trying to find out who might have left the forceps in Nhat.
"Even if they are already retired we will still inform them," she said. "This is a lesson to all doctors".
Medical errors are not uncommon in Vietnam. Over the past year there have been two cases of doctors operating on wrong limbs, and three cases of men being diagnosed as pregnant.
Related Topics
#doctor
#Hospital
#surgery
#surgical malpractice
Must-Watch Video
Stay updated with our news