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ARTICLE |

HARMLESSNESS OF GLASS IN DIGESTIVE TRACT

G. J. C. Wintermute, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;72(10):747. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610100055030.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —One morning I was summoned to the house of an aged and infirm patron, who was temporarily caring for two of her orphan granddaughters, who were about 14 years of age; they were cousins and almost inseparable. They were in agony, making effort to evacuate the bowels without success, referring the intense pain to the regionof the rectum. On digital examination I found the sphincters closely contracted and a mass of gritty substance. After making sufficient digital dilatation I was enabled to remove several ounces of broken glass from the size of coarse sand to that of grains of corn, followed by some venous hemorrhage, which was of short duration. After a brisk cathartic a prompt recovery followed without untoward results. My curiosity was naturally aroused as to the motive for the ingestion of the glass and the manner in which it was done. The girls informed

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