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Любителям суши ( посвящается)
Пт, Авг 25, 2006 07:48pm Alba - 6497 d back

http://www.pravda.ru/society/family/medicine/15-07-2006/190757-suchi-0
Пт, Авг 25, 2006 07:54pm Alba - 6497 d back

Будьте осторожны .Sad
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 09:18am Juie - 6497 d back

tak protivno...vot i esh' posle etogo sushi
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 10:34am [Аноним] - 6497 d back

А еще в воде есть микробы,а в стейке с кровью тоже какие-то червяки встречаются,незаметные для глаза.
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 12:18pm Dervish - 6497 d back

Alba, lyuchshe stishata zapostay Smile
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 01:17pm Alba - 6497 d back

Я предостеречь хотела , самой конечно неприятно ,а что делат Sad
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 02:56pm Ровер - 6496 d back

Ну что теперь, переходим на родные шпроты и кильку в томате? Smile

Мне вот интересно стало, эту сырую рыбу для суши в японских ресторанах замораживают сначала или нет? Заморозка рыбы на сутки убивает паразитов вроде как.

А насчет этого случая нашел статью:

"This is a true case of a japanese man from Gifu Prefecture who complains incessantly about a persistent headache. Mr. Shota Fujiwara loves his sashimi and sushi very much to the extent of trying to get them as "alive and fresh" as can be for his insatiable appetite."

ANALYSIS
"While medical experts agree that the accompanying stories are fiction,
debate over the authenticity of the images themselves is ongoing. When I
showed them to pathologist Ed Friedlander, he concluded they had been
faked, largely because most of the anatomical landmarks one would expect
to find in a dissected brain are nowhere to be seen. Another expert
speculated that the photos could be real, but, if so, depict a very
serious case of scalp cancer, not a "brain infection." In any case, no
one was able to account for their origin.

In a new development, the debunkers at Snopes.com have determined, based
on information from an unnamed but presumably reliable source, that the
images are indeed real and document the case of 70-year-old man
suffering from "an unusual form of cancer which had eaten away at the
upper portion of his skull and scalp." Contacted for a follow-up
opinion, Dr. Friedlander agreed the explanation is plausible, but in his
judgment the photos may still have been retouched. "I cannot account
for the apparent maggots and apparent eggs," he wrote.

Surprisingly, the Snopes.com source also lends partial credence to one
of the email texts - the "ingrown hair" story, which claims the patient
was ultimately treated at "Stanford ER." The source confirmed that the
photographs were indeed taken at Stanford University Hospital, where the
subject was brought by ambulance after a minor traffic accident (note
that he did not "walk in," as the email alleges, complaining of feeling
"a little wobbly on his feet"Wink. Also confirmed, elevating the story's
plausibility another slight notch, was the claim that the patient never
sought treatment for the disease even though it had progressed to the
horrific point we see in the photos, "because the condition was not
causing him pain."

None of the foregoing, obviously, had anything to do with an ingrown
hair, but it would appear that whoever made up that fanciful version of
events was at least dimly aware of the actual circumstances.

As to Mr. Fujiwara, the sushi fanatic who supposedly contracted brain
worms by eating raw fish, that variation of the tale is simply
preposterous. While the medical literature supports the claim that
certain species of tapeworm and roundworm can infect the human digestive
tract when consumed in raw or undercooked fish, I could find no
indication that these particular parasites (in contrast to the pork
tapeworm, which is capable of causing a wider, more serious array of
symptoms) can migrate to other human organs, such as the brain. In
documented cases where pork tapeworm larvae have been found in the
brain, they were embedded, cyst-like, in the neural tissue; they don't
crawl around freely, nor are they capable of boring through the
patient's skull and emerging through the scalp.

To set the record straight, maggots can infest the human brain, and so
can certain types of tapeworm larvae. But these conditions are pretty
rare and, in spite of what you may have heard through the email
grapevine, they don't result from ignoring ingrown hairs or binging on
sushi."
Сб, Авг 26, 2006 11:09pm [Аноним] - 6496 d back

kashmar
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