Chinese doctors remove rusty blade stuck in man's skull for four years | China

Surgeons in southern China have removed a rusty, 10cm (4in) blade from the skull of a man who said it had been stuck in there for four years. Li Fuyan, 30, had been suffering from severe headaches, bad breath and breathing difficulties but never knew why, an official at the Yuxi City people's hospital in

This article is more than 12 years old

Chinese doctors remove rusty blade stuck in man's skull for four years

This article is more than 12 years oldLi Fuyan had suffered years of severe headaches and bad breath after being stabbed in the head by a robber

Surgeons in southern China have removed a rusty, 10cm (4in) blade from the skull of a man who said it had been stuck in there for four years.

Li Fuyan, 30, had been suffering from severe headaches, bad breath and breathing difficulties but never knew why, an official at the Yuxi City people's hospital in Yunnan province said.

Li told doctors he had been stabbed in the lower right jaw by a robber four years ago and the blade broke off inside his head without anyone realising it, said the director of the hospital's Communist party committee's office who would only give his surname, He.

Surgeons worked cautiously to remove the badly corroded blade without shattering it, He said.

The case, which one of the doctors described as a "miracle," has been widely covered by the Chinese media and discussed on the internet.

"We checked his mouth, but no wound or scar has been found. It is very strange as to how the blade got into his head," Xu Wen, deputy director of the hospital's stomatology department, told state broadcaster CCTV.

CCTV showed footage of the rusted knife and interviewed Li, who said: "As time passed, I used injections to kill the pain in my head and ears. It has been four years already."

Dr Eugene Flamm, chairman of neurosurgery at New York's Montefiore medical centre, said x-ray images of the man's head posted on the hospital's website show the knife sitting behind the man's throat, having missed the carotid artery and other key structures.

"There are planes and spaces between important organs. That's how one does surgery – you dissect in those planes, move the trachea one way, the oesophagus the other," he said.

"Maybe out of sheer luck this knife passed through" one such area, Flamm said, adding that he was still surprised at the time the blade supposedly spent in the man's body.

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