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Massachusetts man undergoes emergency surgery after eating wire grille brush bristle

Doctor says cases are rare, but very preventable

Massachusetts man undergoes emergency surgery after eating wire grille brush bristle

Doctor says cases are rare, but very preventable

THAT SENT HIM TO THE HOSPITAL. TAKE A LOOK. >> I CAN BARELY SUE IT. JESSICA: THIS THEN BRISTLE DOES NOT LOOK LIKE MUCH UNTIL YOU EAT ONE. THIS IS THE FIRST TIME JEFFREY HAS SEEN THE EMERGENCY SURGERY THAT SAVED HIS LIFE. THE MARRIED FATHER OF TWO YOUNG BOYS SAYS HE STILL CANNOT BELIEVE WHAT HAPPENED. >> WE WERE HAVING A LITTLE OUTDOOR BARBECUE. JESSICA: HE WAS FOLLOWING HIS REGULAR ROUTINE. OPEN THE GRILL, CLEAN THE GREATS WITH A BRUSH, FIRE IT UP. >> WE HAD A GREAT TIME. GOT COMMENTS ON THE BURGERS. JESSICA: THE NEXT MORNING, HE FELT A PAIN IN HIS STOMACH, BUT IT WENT AWAY GOOD WHEN THE PAIN RETURNED THAT NIGHT, JEFFREY LEFT FOR NEWTON-WELLESLEY HOSPITAL. >> I WAS SORT OF HOBBLING TOWARDS THE ER, CLUTCHING THE SIDE OF MY STOMACH. JESSICA: THIS CT SCAN SHOWS JEFFRIES PROBLEM IN LACK AND BRIGHT WHITE. STUCK TO THE WALL OF HIS STOMACH WAS A WIRE BRISTLE, FIVE CENTIMETERS LONG, THAT HAD BROKEN OFF OF HIS GRILL BRUSH. >> THIS IS OBVIOUSLY A SHARP PIECE OF METAL AND IT CAN CAUSE SIGNIFICANT LEADING. JESSICA: THIS DOCTOR IS NEWTON-WELLESLEY’S CHIEF OF GENERAL SURGERY FOR IT HE WAS ON CALL WHEN JEFFREY CAME IN. >> IT WAS STUCK TO A PIECE OF MEAT THAT WAS GRILLED ON THE BARBECUE. JESSICA: HE WORRIED THE WIRE WOULD CAUSE A LEAK WHERE STOMACH ACID AND BACTERIA COULD ENTER THE ABDOMEN, RAISING THE RISK FOR SEPTIC SHOCK. SO NOW, FOUR HOURS AFTER ARRIVING IN THE ER, JEFFREY WAS NOW IN THE OR, UNDERGOING THIS PROCEDURE TO REMOVE IT. >> I KNEW HOW SERIOUS THIS WAS OR COULD HAVE BEEN, AND HOW LUCKY I WAS. JESSICA: BACK AT THE GRILL, JEFFREY REALIZES HOW LUCKY HIS FRIENDS AND FAMILY HAVE BEEN. >> YOU CAN SEE DOWN HERE. THERE IT IS. RIGHT THERE. THEY ARE EVERYWHERE, THEY ARE STICKING OUT OF THE BURNERS. THEY ARE IN THE CHART. JESSICA: DID YOU FEEL THE METAL WHEN YOU ARE BITING? HOW DID THAT HAPPEN? >> I THINK I JUST DID NOT CHEW THE FIRST BITE WELL ENOUGH. AND IT WENT DOWN AND THAT WAS THE END OF IT. JESSICA: HIS MOM IS NOT HAPPY. >> CHEW YOUR FOOD. JESSICA: NOW JEFFREY HAS A NEW GRILL BRUSH, THIS TIME WITH NO BRISTLES. >> IT DID NOT LOOK LIKE IT WAS FALLING APART, BUT IT WAS. JESSICA: AGAIN, THESE CASES ARE RARE, BUT PREVENTABLE. IF YOU A WIRE GROW BRUSQUE, YOU CAN REPLACE IT WITH SAFER OPTIONS. SOME EXPERTS SUGGEST USING A GRILL STONE OR COILED BRUSH. YOU CAN EITHER CRUMPLE ALUMINUM FOIL TO BRUSH OFF THE GRE
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Massachusetts man undergoes emergency surgery after eating wire grille brush bristle

Doctor says cases are rare, but very preventable

The thin wire bristles on some grill brushes don't look like much — that is until you eat one.That's what Jeffrey Czaplinski said happened to him after his family hosted an outdoor barbecue."We had a great time," he said. "Got compliments on the burgers."The next morning, Czaplinski felt a pain in his stomach, but it went away.When the pain returned that night, he left for Newton-Wellesley Hospital."I was sort of hobbling towards the ER, clutching the side of my stomach," Czaplinski said.A CT scan showed the source of his pain in black and white.Stuck through the wall of his stomach was a wire bristle that was about 5 cm long.It had broken off his grill brush."This is obviously a sharp piece of metal," said Dr. Charu Paranjape, Newton-Wellesley's chief of general surgery. "It can cause significant bleeding."He was on call when Czaplinski came in."It clearly was probably stuck to a piece of meat that was grilled on the barbecue," Paranjape said.He worried the wire would cause a leak where stomach acid and bacteria could enter the abdomen, raising the risk for septic shock.As a result, four hours after arriving in the emergency room, Czaplinski was now in the operating room undergoing an emergency procedure to remove it."I knew how serious this really could have been and how lucky I was that this was like a pinprick," he said.Now back at his grill, Czaplinski realizes just how lucky his friends and family have been as well."They're everywhere," he said, pointing to broken wire bristles around the grate. "They're sticking out of the burners. They're in the char."Czaplinski has already replaced the old grill brush with a new one that's safer."It didn't look like it was falling apart, but it was," he said.Experts emphasize these cases are rare, but very preventable.They suggest tossing the wire brush in the trash.A list of safer alternatives includes a grill stone or a coiled brush. Another option is crumpling aluminum foil to clean the grate after it cools.

The thin wire bristles on some grill brushes don't look like much — that is until you eat one.

That's what Jeffrey Czaplinski said happened to him after his family hosted an outdoor barbecue.

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"We had a great time," he said. "Got compliments on the burgers."

The next morning, Czaplinski felt a pain in his stomach, but it went away.

When the pain returned that night, he left for Newton-Wellesley Hospital.

"I was sort of hobbling towards the ER, clutching the side of my stomach," Czaplinski said.

A CT scan showed the source of his pain in black and white.

Stuck through the wall of his stomach was a wire bristle that was about 5 cm long.

It had broken off his grill brush.

"This is obviously a sharp piece of metal," said Dr. Charu Paranjape, Newton-Wellesley's chief of general surgery. "It can cause significant bleeding."

He was on call when Czaplinski came in.

"It clearly was probably stuck to a piece of meat that was grilled on the barbecue," Paranjape said.

He worried the wire would cause a leak where stomach acid and bacteria could enter the abdomen, raising the risk for septic shock.

As a result, four hours after arriving in the emergency room, Czaplinski was now in the operating room undergoing an emergency procedure to remove it.

"I knew how serious this really could have been and how lucky I was that this was like a pinprick," he said.

Now back at his grill, Czaplinski realizes just how lucky his friends and family have been as well.

"They're everywhere," he said, pointing to broken wire bristles around the grate. "They're sticking out of the burners. They're in the char."

Czaplinski has already replaced the old grill brush with a new one that's safer.

"It didn't look like it was falling apart, but it was," he said.

Experts emphasize these cases are rare, but very preventable.

They suggest tossing the wire brush in the trash.

A list of safer alternatives includes a grill stone or a coiled brush. Another option is crumpling aluminum foil to clean the grate after it cools.