Friday, June 21, 2013
Doctors shocked as man Starts bleeding green blood
Doctors were shocked after
seeing a patient that was
bleeding green blood, according
to reports.
A team of Canadian surgeons
got a shock when the patient
they were operating on began
shedding dark greenish-black blood, the local newspaper
reported.
He emulated science officer Mr. Spock of Star Trek
Enterprise, who supposedly had green Vulcan blood. In this
case, the unusual blood color of the 42-year-old was the result
of the medication he was taking for migraine headaches.
The surgery of the man's leg went ahead successfully and his
blood returned to normal once the drug had tapered off. The
patient had been taking large doses of sumatriptan, 200
milligrams a day. This had caused a rare condition called
sulfhaemoglobinaemia, wherein sulfur is incorporated in the
hemoglobin oxygen transport compound in the red blood
cells.
In describing the case to the local newspaper, doctors, led by
Dr. Alana Flexman of St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver wrote:
"The patient recovered uneventfully and stopped taking
sumatriptan after discharge. "When seen five weeks after the
last dose, he was found to have no sulfhaemoglobin in his
blood." The man had needed urgent surgery because he had
developed a dangerous condition in the legs after falling
asleep in a sitting position.
The surgeons performed urgent fasciotomies, a limb saving
procedure involving surgical incisions to relieve pressure and
swelling caused by the condition known as compartment
syndrome. In compartment syndrome, inflammation and
pressure in a confined space limits the flow of blood to tissue
that causes localized damage to the nerves.
It is commonly caused by trauma, internal bleeding or a
wound dressing or cast being too tight.
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