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View Full Version : Illinois man inhales drill bit into lung during dentist visit



Teh One Who Knocks
04-20-2022, 11:35 AM
CNN News Wire


https://i.imgur.com/DIvyXKE.jpg

KENOSHA, Wisconsin -- This could be a dental patient's worst nightmare.

What began as a routine visit landed an Illinois man in the hospital after he inhaled the dentist's drill bit, WISN reported.

The CT scan tells the shocking story: An inch-long dental drill bit had lodged deep in Tom Jozsi's lung.

"I was at the dentist getting a tooth filled, and then next thing I know I was told I swallowed this tool, so I didn't really even feel it going down. All I felt was a cough," Jozsi said.

Doctors believe that inhaling just before he coughed sent the metal object deep into the 60-year-old maintenance worker's airways.

It was so deep, pulmonary expert Dr. Abdul Alraiyes said, that normal scopes couldn't reach it.

"When I saw the CAT scan, and where that object is sitting, it was really far down on the right lower lobe of the lung," said Alraiyes, intervention pulmonary director at Aurora Medical Center in Kenosha.

"What happens if he can't get it out? And really the answer really was, part of my lung was going to have to get removed," Jozsi said.

That's when Alraiyes and the Aurora Kenosha team decided to try a newer device, one not designed for removing foreign objects.

"It's more for early detection of cancer, especially lung cancer," Alraiyes said.

He said it's the size of a catheter.

Video of the scan showed the medical team was able to navigate the narrow airways, reach the drill piece and pull it out, without any harm to the patient.

"I was never so happy in my life when I opened my eyes and I saw him with a smile under that mask, shaking a little plastic container that had the tool in it," Jozsi said.

It's a souvenir Jozsi said he now keeps on a shelf at home.

The drill bit was in the man's lung for four days.

The doctor who removed it said he has heard from colleagues in Michigan and Ohio who reported seeing cases nearly identical to this one.

lost in melb.
04-20-2022, 11:57 AM
Absolutely fantastic. Western medicine :headbang:

Muddy
04-20-2022, 02:13 PM
I'm sorry. I'd have to get some compensation from the dentist.. This is negligence.

PorkChopSandwiches
04-20-2022, 05:02 PM
:wtf:

Teh One Who Knocks
04-20-2022, 05:06 PM
Absolutely fantastic. Western medicine :headbang:

Would you rather go and have dental work done in rural India? :-k

PorkChopSandwiches
04-20-2022, 05:10 PM
A lot of people go to Mexico, since its so much cheaper then here. They always come back with teeth that were bigger then before :rofl:

Teh One Who Knocks
04-20-2022, 05:17 PM
:lol:

Yeah, cheaper isn't always better

lost in melb.
04-20-2022, 06:15 PM
Would you rather go and have dental work done in rural India? :-k

I said medicine, not dentistry. How they got the drill bit out :)

Teh One Who Knocks
04-20-2022, 06:16 PM
I said medicine, not dentistry. How they got the drill bit out :)

Dentists can prescribe medicine :nono:

lost in melb.
04-22-2022, 04:37 AM
Dentists can prescribe medicine :nono:

Not in Australia.

Teh One Who Knocks
04-22-2022, 09:59 AM
Not in Australia.

Really? Didn't know that....here dentists go through almost as much schooling as a regular MD. Granted, they specialize only in dentistry, but they hold the title of doctor here. And all dentists can prescribe medication here, including narcotics.

Muddy
04-22-2022, 12:52 PM
My dentist gives me morphine when they clean my teeth.