Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Nitrogen cocktail in Gurgaon bar gives man hole in stomach

- Anonna Dutt

NEW DELHI: When a 30-year-old Delhi man walked into a bar, all he wanted was a good drink, but he ended up with his stomach ‘open like a book’.

What he drank was a cocktail with white smoke flowing from it. Not realising the drink was to be had after the ‘smoke’ dissipates, he downed it in one draught. Extreme pain, abdomen swelling and breathless­ness followed, and he was rushed to a Gurgaon hospital where the doctors took him to surgery and found a huge hole in his stomach “open like a book”.

The man had consumed liquid nitrogen that has a boiling point of -195.8 degree Celsius and is used to instantly freeze food and drinks. The liquid is also used to cool computers and in cryogenic medical procedures like removing warts by freezing them. When used to freeze drinks, it should only be consumed after the nitrogen has completely evaporated.

“When I gulped down the drink, I started feeling uncomforta­ble, like how you feel when there is an acid reflux. The bartender passed me another drink and I had it, not thinking too much about the discomfort. However, within seconds, my stomach started swelling and I was in unbearable pain. Breathing was also difficult,” said the man, who did not want to be named.

Liquid nitrogen has an expansion ratio of 1:694 at 20 degree Celsius, meaning one litre of liquid nitrogen at 20 degree Celsius can expand to 694 litres of nitrogen gas. And, as it evaporates, liquid nitrogen freezes everything around it, including tissues that come in contact with it.

“Consuming liquid nitrogen can cause havoc in a person’s system. By nature, liquid nitrogen expands manifold and evaporates when left at room temperatur­e. The gas did not have an escape route after the person consumed it and the sphincter closed, this is what led to a perforatio­n (a hole) in his stomach,” said Dr Amit Deepta Goswami, the person’s doctor and consultant of bariatric and minimally invasive surgery at Columbia Asia Hospital, Gurgaon.

Dr Goswami said the man had come to the emergency section of Columbia Asia hospital feeling drowsy and restless. His stomach was abnormally swollen. His heart rate, blood pressure, and oxygen saturation were all haywire, he said.

The doctors also noticed that his lactic acid level was extremely high. “This meant that there was oxygen deprivatio­n in the body. He had to be put on a ventilator immediatel­y. A CT scan showed that there was free air in the abdominal cavity, meaning that there was a tear in the stomach or the intestines,” Dr Goswami said.

During the surgery, doctors found a huge perforatio­n in the man’s stomach. “Usually perforatio­ns are smaller and can be sewed up. However, in this case, we found that the middle and the lower parts of the stomach were open like a book. It was not possible to stitch it back, besides the tissue near the tear was also damaged.

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