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In the UK, doctors have discovered aggressive cancer in a man who was hospitalized after biting his tongue, the Bristol Post reported.
Last summer, 26-year-old Dan Durant first noticed a strange growth on the right side of his tongue, but thought nothing of it. But in April, I sneezed and bit my tongue so hard that the lump became inflamed, so I had no choice but to go to the hospital.
After a medical examination, the man learned that the seemingly harmless ulcer was an aggressive squamous cell carcinoma. It later turned out that the inflammation of the tongue was not the only sign of cancer. Durant also lost weight and suffered from constant sore throats.
"I was angry that they told me that. I cried. It was so unreal," the Briton recalls.
On September 12, he underwent an 11.5-hour operation, during which surgeons discovered a second tumor and removed half of the patient's tongue. To rebuild it, skin and arteries were taken from his forearm and then transplanted to the same place on Dan's abdomen. He also had cancerous lymph nodes removed from his neck. After the operation, the man remained in hospital for eight days to recover and learn to eat and drink again.
"Learning to swallow properly was quite difficult. I'm just starting to get used to chewing. My jaw often hurts. "We'll have to learn everything again," he admitted.
The diagnosis has left Dan unable to work and disrupted his plans to find a new job, but he says his family and friends have been incredibly supportive. He is now awaiting the results of a lymph node biopsy and, if the results are good, will have another course of radiotherapy.