

Katy Perry's risks backlash over her Coronation antics as she takes photo of her feet on Westminster Abbey memorial to Winston ChurchillĪ dazzling Princess: Kate is radiant in an ivory Alexander McQueen dress featuring flowers from the four nations as she pays tribute to DianaĬheers to the King! Newly crowned King Charles and Queen Camilla are cheered by crowds as they leave Westminster Abbey in the Gold State Coach

No more meal-time tantrums! Start to ENJOY family dinners again with these delicious 20-minute ideas everyone will love What are Mike Tindall's three medals? Zara's husband sports his honours to King's coronation - despite saying he 'hates' wearing them

King Charles and Queen Camilla are both looking 'contemplative' yet 'more relaxed' than expected, according to a body language expertĪ tale of two coronations: How King Charles' Westminster Abbey service compares to The Queen's - and those who attended both This can mean that when someone pulls on an object to try to remove it, the vacuum causes it to travel up further inside them. In worst-case scenarios, where an object is too far up to be removed, then there might be a major operation to get the object out.ĭoctors have previously warned that when objects become stuck in the rectum, they can lead to the formation of a vacuum.
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'If it is really tricky, we may have to do this in a safer environment in theatre with the patient sedated or anesthetized and with full relaxation of the sphincters.' 'We are very careful not to damage the very important anal sphincters. requiring a bit of perseverance in with lots of lubricant and some basic instruments to grab hold of the thing and gently pull it out. ' wine bottles, deodorant cans, a shower curtain rail, keys, a toy plastic snake, a gerbil - and, of course, sex toys,' she said.Īsked how they are removed, she added: 'When patients come in, sometimes it's simple to manage. Other viewers were also quick to respond including one who said 'he literally had a bright f****** idea lol' and a second who complimented the patient on his 'impressive skill and recklessness'.ĭr Alice Murray, a colorectal surgeon at Harvard Medical School, previously told Metro that a 'whole range' of items get stuck up people's backsides. 'Suction can be applied like that carried out by obstetricians during normal vaginal delivery.' It quickly prompted a number of responses online including from UK-based gastroenterologist Dr Keith Siau, who wrote: 'Sorry, I'm out of bright ideas.'Īnother medic, Pakistan-based gastroenterologist Dr Ikram Tirmizi, said: ' Seems like a bulb. Revealing the case online, Dr Julian Pylori, a gastroenterologist in Colombia, wrote: ' Not palpable on rectal examination. Doctors said he was lucky that the bulb had not shattered.
