Popcorn stuck in Cornish man’s tooth leads to endocarditis

Popcorn stuck in Cornish man’s tooth leads to endocarditis

A 41-year-old Cornish firefighter who attempted to dislodge a piece of popcorn stuck in his teeth using various objects claims he later developed a life-threatening infection that required him to undergo open heart surgery. Adam Martin said he noticed the piece of popcorn stuck in a back tooth after he and his wife watched a film in September. For three days, he was unable to remove it.

He claims to have used multiple objects — a pen lid, a toothpick, a piece of wire and even a metal nail — to remove the popcorn, but was unsuccessful, and even damaged his surrounding gum when doing so. A week later, Martin began to suffer from night sweats, fatigue, headaches— all of which he initially thought were signs of the flu but would later learn were signs of endocarditis.

By October, Martin’s symptoms had yet to subside, leading him to see his doctor, who diagnosed him with a mild heart murmur and sent him home. But when he continued to feel unwell, he went to the Royal Cornwall Hospital. “I had a feeling [that] there was something seriously wrong. I was sleeping an awful lot and I felt terrible,” he recalled. “I had aches and pains in my legs and I just did not feel right at all. I was admitted to hospital the same day for tests. By this point, I was very worried.”

Scans of his chest showed his heart was damaged due to the infection. He was then transferred to a different hospital, where he reportedly underwent a seven-hour open heart surgery to repair his mitral valve and replace his aortic valve. “My heart was not properly working anymore. It was essentially wrecked. The infection had eaten the valves away,” he claimed.

“If I had gone to the dentist in the first place then none of this would have happened. At one point it was touch and go. It was the worst experience of my life,” he continued. “I wasn’t far off death’s door and I am extremely lucky. The popcorn stuck in my teeth is the only possible cause I can think of. I am never eating popcorn again that’s for sure. It’s crazy to think all this happened because of that. It was something so trivial."

Martin’s wife, 38-year-old Helen, told a news agency that her husband’s infection could have easily been treated with antibiotics if it had been caught sooner. “Any sign of a toothache, bleeding gums, an abscess —  get it checked out,” she advised. “Your gums are a bacterial highway to your heart.”

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Neel Kothari
I agree it would have been best to see a dentist, but is this a case of causation or coincidence?
Neel

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