Doctors Remove Cricket Ball-Sized Hairball From 8-Year-Old’s Stomach In Bengaluru

Date:

Doctors diagnosed Aditi’s condition to be gastritis and prescribed pills accordingly. (Representational)

New Delhi:

In a rare case, doctors in Bengaluru removed a massive hairball — as large as a cricket ball — from the stomach of an 8-year-old girl, the hospital said on Wednesday.

The girl Aditi (name changed) had a rare case of trichophagia — the compulsive habit of eating hair, also known as the Rapunzel syndrome.

Her parents were baffled by her repeated bouts of poor appetite and frequent vomiting over the last two years. They took her to many doctors including paediatricians, general physicians, and ENT specialists hoping to identify the problem and a cure for her condition.

They diagnosed Aditi’s condition to be gastritis and prescribed pills accordingly.

However, doctors at Aster’s Children and Women Hospital, Bengaluru, found that she had a trichobezoar — a term that describes all the hair mass that had accumulated in her gastrointestinal tract.

“Trichobezoar is an extremely rare condition and especially very rare in a child as young as Aditi. It is often associated with trichophagia, a psychological disorder where individuals eat hair. While commonly seen in adolescent girls, finding this in a much younger child highlights the uniqueness of this case,” Dr. Manjiri Somashekhar, Lead and Senior Consultant – Paediatric Surgery told IANS

An open stomach surgery, also known as laparotomy, had to be performed on Aditi because the hairball was very large and sticky and the situation was too complicated for an endoscopy to be performed.

This method, which was done in a total of two and a half hours, proved fruitful because it prevented any leakage into the peritoneal cavity, the doctor said.

If left undiagnosed, her condition could have led to severe malnutrition, anaemia, and significant bleeding from the stomach.

Following the surgery, she was placed on a special diet and continues to receive counselling and regular monitoring, the doctor said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Water hazards could be major factor as LPGA moves to new Ohio venue at TPC River’s Bend

'Birdie chances out there' for long hittersKorda noted that...

🚨 Ten Hag delivers encouraging update on injured Man Utd duo

Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag has confirmed that...

Fantasy Basketball Rankings: Power forward draft tiers for 2024-25 NBA season

The 2024-25 NBA season is fast approaching, so in...

Lions head coach Dan Campbell selling home amid security concerns

Detroit Lions head coach Dan Campbell and his wife...