A pageant mother from Florida fed her teenage daughter tapeworms to help her slim down for a competition, a nurse has revealed.
Maricar
Cabral-Osori told how she admitted the girl to the ER with severe
stomach cramps and initially suspected she was pregnant - something an
ultrasound ruled out.
However,
the cause of the pain became clear when the nurse later found the
teenager screaming over a toilet bowl full of tapeworms, she recalled on
a recent episode of Untold Stories of the ER.
Ms
Cabral-Osori said the girl's mother, 'who turned white', admitted buying
tapeworm eggs in Mexico and feeding them to her daughter. The eggs
hatched after the girl ingested them.
She said: 'The mom was apologizing to the girl.
'She's like, ''I'm so sorry. You know, I just did it to make you a little skinnier.
You needed some help before we went on to the pageant'',' Gawker reported.
Ms
Cabrai-Osori said the teenager had passed the tapeworms, some of which
were 'very long and trying to get out of the toilet bowl'.
Tapeoworms
have been used for nearly 100 years to increase weight-loss, but
doctors have warned the practice is extremely dangerous.
Tapeworms attach themselves to the intestinal wall of its host and then absorb nutrients and calories.
Certain tapeworms can grow up to 30 feet long and can live within a host for up to 20 years.
Most
people affected with tapeworms have no symptoms, while others may
experience abdominal pain, nausea, bloating, diarrhea, weakness, loss of
appetite, weight loss, vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition.
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