stevethrower
11-27-2007, 11:28 AM
EARLIER in the week, this video of Two Girls One Cup (http://www.anorak.co.uk/anorak-in-new-york/177793.html), and now we learn of a grandmother who contracted a potentially fatal superbug. She was saved by ingesting her daughter’s poo.
Ethel McEwan, an 83-year-old from Scotland, contracted Clostridium Difficile, the Daily Record reports.
But she survived after her daughter Winnifred gave her a “faecal transplant” - a sample turd is liquidised and fed down a tube into the patient’s stomach. The treatment restores bacteria to a level that can aid the recovery process.
“When you tell people about the treatment, they wrinkle their noses,” says Mrs McEwan. “But it’s not like they put it on a plate and have you eat it.
You don’t ever see or smell a thing.
“People will have a blood transplant or a kidney transplant – what’s the difference with this?”
Why tell her? What’s to gain?
http://www.anorak.co.uk/strange-but-true/177960.html
Ethel McEwan, an 83-year-old from Scotland, contracted Clostridium Difficile, the Daily Record reports.
But she survived after her daughter Winnifred gave her a “faecal transplant” - a sample turd is liquidised and fed down a tube into the patient’s stomach. The treatment restores bacteria to a level that can aid the recovery process.
“When you tell people about the treatment, they wrinkle their noses,” says Mrs McEwan. “But it’s not like they put it on a plate and have you eat it.
You don’t ever see or smell a thing.
“People will have a blood transplant or a kidney transplant – what’s the difference with this?”
Why tell her? What’s to gain?
http://www.anorak.co.uk/strange-but-true/177960.html