GUANGZHOU, CHINA — In a case that left surgeons baffled, doctors at Guangzhou First People’s Hospital extracted an 8-inch stainless steel spoon from a patient’s abdomen last week, three months after the man dismissed the stabbing incident as “a drunken dream.”
Key Details of the Bizarre Case
- Patient: 35-year-old factory worker (identity protected)
- Timeline: Spoon lodged since March 2025; surgery performed June 27
- Discovery: Chronic stomach pain finally prompted a CT scan showing a spoon handle piercing duodenum
- Surgery: 3-hour laparoscopic procedure; spoon removed intact
The Patient’s Account
“I woke up with stomach pain but no wounds, so I thought I dreamed it,” the patient told surgeons. “After heavy drinking that night, I only remembered falling, not being stabbed.”
Medical records confirm he’d visited the ER twice but refused scans due to “embarrassment.”
Surgical Revelation
- Position: Spoon handle embedded in duodenum, head near liver
- Complications: Life-threatening sepsis risk from perforated intestine
- Shocking Visual: X-rays show spoon perfectly aligned with spine (image available)
Why Didn’t He Notice?
Doctors cite three factors:
- Alcohol-induced neuropathy masks pain
- Spoon migrated slowly, avoiding major nerves
- Psychological denial (“unthinkable truth bias”)
Medical Warnings Issued
Dr. Li Wenjie (lead surgeon): “Foreign objects can mimic common ailments. Always insist on imaging for unexplained abdominal pain.”
Statistics: 12% of ingested-object cases involve alcohol-impaired patients
Viral Aftermath
The spoon’s removal video gained 17M+ views on Douyin, with hashtags:
#SpoonManChallenge (parody trend), #DrunkenRealityCheck (alcohol awareness)