This is no way to do your own colonoscopy. Vietnamese doctors removed a live 2-foot-long eel from a man’s abdomen — that had chewed through his intestines after he shoved it up his anus.
A 31-year-old Indian national was rushed to a hospital in Vietnam's capital Hanoi after experiencing severe abdominal pain due to a live eel he had inserted into his anus, a report said.
A man who stuffed a live eel up his backside was left in agony when the sharp-toothed sea creature tried to bite its way out of his digestive tract. Horrified medics in Vietnam discovered the 26 ...
One person has died and nearly 150 others have been sickened after eating grilled eel prepared by a restaurant chain and sold at a department store near Tokyo TOKYO -- One person died and nearly ...
Here is a guide to help you out! The Electric Eel deviant is a special creature that helps your generators maximize their power output. This creature thrives in an environment with blue light ...
HANOI – A 31-year-old Indian national in Vietnam nearly lost his life after inserting a live eel, about 65cm long, into his anus. Viet Duc Hospital in Hanoi on July 29 said the hospital’s ...
Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts. One person has died and nearly 150 others left ill after eating grilled eel prepared by a restaurant chain and sold at a department store near Tokyo ...
Grilled eel, a popular summer delicacy in Japan, is behind a department store food poisoning incident that has left more than 140 people sick and one dead, the store's president said. Shinji ...
YOKOHAMA—An "unagi" (eel) restaurant here was forced to suspend operations on July 29 after a massive food poisoning outbreak sickened 130 customers, one of whom died. The customers reported ...
Eel is customarily eaten on "doyo no ushi no hi", or the summer Days of the Ox as designated by Japan's traditional calendar, which mark midsummer. This year they fall on July 24th and August 5th ...
Researchers at the University of Cambridge say they came up with the idea of using jelly-like materials to build ‘self-healing batteries’ after studying the muscle cells of electric eels.