Tapeworms in humans aren't an odd sight, unless
of course they measure in at 16ft. 45-year-old Chen from Guangxi, south China
who loves to eat raw beef and fish complained of stomach problems to doctors.
Tests were carried out by his city's Gastroenterology department which revealed
the tapeworm and even then, it took five days to extract.
Doctors determined the parasite had come from
contaminated raw food and studied it to discover how it grew so long in its
host. Tapeworms - or taenia saginata as they are known scientifically - has
eggs which hatch in cattle and are carried through the body by the animal's
circulatory system. The eggs hatch three months after human consumption and
develop into adults in the small intestine which according to scientists have a
life expectancy of 60 years. To think someone could carry it around almost all
their life.
Doctors have advised that meat and fish fans
should be wary when eating unregulated and under cooked-produce - and that if
raw beef is consumed, it should be chilled well beforehand.
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