How do you NOT know the head of a toothbrush got jammed up your honker?
Doctors in India have removed a toothbrush from a woman's nose.
The housewife says she isn't sure how the three inch long brush got lodged in her nostril.
She approached a hospital in Mumbai two months ago suffering from severe pain.
The Mumbai Mirror reports that the broken toothbrush showed up during a CT scan, shocking doctors.
The 31-year-old woman said: "I was brushing my teeth, my husband accidentally pushed me and the toothbrush in my hand broke.
"I was left holding the lower portion of the brush but couldn't locate the rest of it. Soon after, I started bleeding profusely from the nose.
"But since that day, I began getting breathless and a foul-smelling discharge began to come out of my nose. I used to get restless gasping for breath sometimes."
Dr Kaushal Sheth, who performed the surgery, said: "The odour from her nose was so bad that it could be smelt from a distance of two feet. If the object had fallen into her windpipe, she could have choked to death."
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_2556955.html
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How do you NOT know the head of a toothbrush got jammed up your honker?
Sympathizes.
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She probably waited two months for the other, more indicting, bruises to heal from when her husband "accidently pushed her".
Exactly what I was thinking. How do you accidentally push someone hard enough for a toothbrush to lodge up her nose and break? What were they doing in there? Playing rugby?
Good point.
she was probably being punished for having a dirty mind and her husband felt he needed to scrub her brain
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