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He feel he special because dem now come across scorpion pepper?wIgga please.Rovin wrote:Cantmis wrote:https://youtu.be/vtdnfA5ZZds
u hadda embed d ting hossboidanboi .....
pugboy wrote:mark could certainly enter those pepper eating contests and be a serious contendrt
Case Report of Presumed (In)voluntary Capsaicin Intoxication Mimicking an Acute Abdomen
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/3610401
Background.
The clinical features of a presumed capsaicin intoxication have not been reported so far.
Case Presentation.
A 27-year-old man took part in a qualifying for a competition in spicy food tolerance. During this qualifying, he swallowed 4 chili peppers type Bhut jolokia (about 1 million Scoville units) and other extremely spicy foods; the total amount of capsaicin ingested (roughly calculated retrospectively) accounted for at least 600 mg. After 2½ hours, the patient developed severe abdominal pain, which led to hospital admission. In contrast to the severe symptoms, clinical, laboratory, and imaging examinations (ultrasound and plain X-ray of the abdomen) did not reveal any significant abnormalities. Treatment with analgesics resulted in complete regression of the abdominal pain within 30 hours. Conclusions. The clinical picture in the view of pharmacological investigations on intestinal capsaicin infusions suggests that excessive doses of capsaicin can induce severe abdominal pain; the prolonged symptoms were probably due to the failure to vomit. Thus, a capsaicin intoxication must be considered in the differential diagnosis of an acute abdomen.
Esophageal Rupture After Ghost Pepper Ingestion
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2016.05.061
Case Report
A 47-year-old man presented to the Emergency Department (ED) with severe abdominal and chest pain subsequent to violent retching and vomiting after eating ghost peppers as part of a contest. A subsequent chest x-ray study showed evidence of a left-sided pleural effusion and patchy infiltrates. A computed tomography scan of the abdomen and pelvis showed pneumomediastinum with air around the distal esophagus, suggestive of a spontaneous esophageal perforation and a left-sided pneumothorax. The patient was intubated and taken immediately to the operating room, where he was noted to have a 2.5-cm tear in the distal esophagus, with a mediastinal fluid collection including food debris, as well as a left-sided pneumothorax. The patient was extubated on hospital day 14, and was discharged home with a gastric tube in place on hospital day 23.
Post-Pepper Pain, Perforation, and Peritonitis
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/400267
JAMA. 1992;268(13):1686. doi:10.1001/jama.1992.03490130074031
To the Editor. —Spices have long been associated with gastric mucosal injury. We report a case of ruptured duodenal ulcer associated with eating chili peppers.A 23-year-old man was admitted to the casualty ward with excruciating abdominal pain and vomiting. Four hours before admission he had competed with his brother in eating 25 chili peppers within 12 minutes. The pain began 2 hours later. There was no history of dyspepsia or any other symptoms related to ulcer diathesis or recent stressful events.On physical examination, the patient was in pain and had overt peritoneal irritation. Routine tests including complete blood cell count and serum urea nitrogen, electrolyte, and amylase levels were within normal limits.Plain abdominal roentgenogram demonstrated free air under the diaphragm. On exploratory laparotomy, the duodenum was neither deformed nor scarred, but a free, round, 5-mm-diameter perforation of the anterior wall was found, together with mild peritonitis.
Your esophagus is the tube that carries food from your throat to your stomach. It plays a vital role in digestion. Sometimes, violent coughing or vomiting can tear the tissue of your lower esophagus and it can start to bleed. The condition is called a Mallory-Weiss tear.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/malloryweiss-tear
That only works for sourPhone Surgeon wrote:anyone ever try miracle fruit/miracle berry when trying to eat hot pepper?
maj. tom wrote:This man ate so much pepper he had to go to the ERCase Report of Presumed (In)voluntary Capsaicin Intoxication Mimicking an Acute Abdomen
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/3610401
Background.
The clinical features of a presumed capsaicin intoxication have not been reported so far.
Case Presentation.
A 27-year-old man took part in a qualifying for a competition in spicy food tolerance. During this qualifying, he swallowed 4 chili peppers type Bhut jolokia (about 1 million Scoville units) and other extremely spicy foods; the total amount of capsaicin ingested (roughly calculated retrospectively) accounted for at least 600 mg. After 2½ hours, the patient developed severe abdominal pain, which led to hospital admission. In contrast to the severe symptoms, clinical, laboratory, and imaging examinations (ultrasound and plain X-ray of the abdomen) did not reveal any significant abnormalities. Treatment with analgesics resulted in complete regression of the abdominal pain within 30 hours. Conclusions. The clinical picture in the view of pharmacological investigations on intestinal capsaicin infusions suggests that excessive doses of capsaicin can induce severe abdominal pain; the prolonged symptoms were probably due to the failure to vomit. Thus, a capsaicin intoxication must be considered in the differential diagnosis of an acute abdomen.
It can get worse. This is why you don't try to poison yourself with pepper.Esophageal Rupture After Ghost Pepper Ingestion
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2016.05.061
Case Report
A 47-year-old man presented to the Emergency Department (ED) with severe abdominal and chest pain subsequent to violent retching and vomiting after eating ghost peppers as part of a contest. A subsequent chest x-ray study showed evidence of a left-sided pleural effusion and patchy infiltrates. A computed tomography scan of the abdomen and pelvis showed pneumomediastinum with air around the distal esophagus, suggestive of a spontaneous esophageal perforation and a left-sided pneumothorax. The patient was intubated and taken immediately to the operating room, where he was noted to have a 2.5-cm tear in the distal esophagus, with a mediastinal fluid collection including food debris, as well as a left-sided pneumothorax. The patient was extubated on hospital day 14, and was discharged home with a gastric tube in place on hospital day 23.Post-Pepper Pain, Perforation, and Peritonitis
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/400267
JAMA. 1992;268(13):1686. doi:10.1001/jama.1992.03490130074031
To the Editor. —Spices have long been associated with gastric mucosal injury. We report a case of ruptured duodenal ulcer associated with eating chili peppers.A 23-year-old man was admitted to the casualty ward with excruciating abdominal pain and vomiting. Four hours before admission he had competed with his brother in eating 25 chili peppers within 12 minutes. The pain began 2 hours later. There was no history of dyspepsia or any other symptoms related to ulcer diathesis or recent stressful events.On physical examination, the patient was in pain and had overt peritoneal irritation. Routine tests including complete blood cell count and serum urea nitrogen, electrolyte, and amylase levels were within normal limits.Plain abdominal roentgenogram demonstrated free air under the diaphragm. On exploratory laparotomy, the duodenum was neither deformed nor scarred, but a free, round, 5-mm-diameter perforation of the anterior wall was found, together with mild peritonitis.
Those are extreme cases of course. But high capsaicin ingestion can lead to violent uncontrollable coughing, hiccups and vomiting in anyone. It can quickly turn bad. So be careful with that kind of pepper and the stupidly obstinate remarks that a scorpion/ghost pepper has a "fruity" taste and oh claims of how they can taste it beyond the searing pain, blistering sinus nerves in your brain and perhaps worse consequences. That's just complete bullsheit and you know it.Your esophagus is the tube that carries food from your throat to your stomach. It plays a vital role in digestion. Sometimes, violent coughing or vomiting can tear the tissue of your lower esophagus and it can start to bleed. The condition is called a Mallory-Weiss tear.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/malloryweiss-tear
Rovin wrote:david seems to be a next pepper man who cud give mark a run
it have trinis who grew up from small on peppah jes like mark , every food they eating is level pepper , on YT have videos explaining this, d pepper stimulates sensory pleasure stuff in ur brain similar to how drugs do
not me nah , i grew up with pepper as a background flavor jes tasting that its barely there ...
Cantmis wrote:https://youtu.be/GqbSUuYDjuU
Pugboy you Guyanese?pugboy wrote:i was once given some shrimp curry which had a whole super hot pepper and some pimentos as well which they didnt know were cross pollinated.
my stomach burnt and was bloated for over a week., was taking yoghurt and all kidna thing.
eating only soup for a week
what I shoulda take was nexium or one of those drugs but i didnt know.
Cantmis wrote:https://youtu.be/GqbSUuYDjuU
DMan7 wrote:
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