Woman has heart attack after doing bogus 'soy sauce cleanse'

December 12, 2018  19:33

An American woman suffered permanent brain damage after she drank a liter of soy sauce in an attempt to 'cleanse her colon.'

A 39-year-old woman drank the condiment believing it would flush toxins from her body, recounted Dr Bernard on his medical YouTube channel Chubbyemu.

Instead, she ended up going into cardiac arrest and was left with irreversible nerve damage.  

Doctors at the hospital discovered that she had 200 grams of salt in her blood, which is five times the lethal dose.

They tried to bring the sodium levels in her blood - but the change was too rapid, which resulted in her being left brain dead.

According to CG's husband, Julio, she was already in poor health, having lost 25 pounds in the previous three weeks.

Over the last six months, she had begun eating a diet consisting only of white bread and canned fish, leaving her extremely deficient in vitamins and iron.

Prior to the incident, she had also been hospitalized for displaying signs of paranoid schizophrenia - which was not responding to medicine - and believed she was being poisoned by the government. 

During this time, CG found a video online that claimed drinking a liter of soy sauce in two hours could cleanse the body.

Dr Bernard, who discusses extraordinary medical cases on his YouTube channel, says the woman's heartbeat began racing, her stomach cramping and she felt a tingling sensation in her arms and legs.

She also resisted the urge to drink water, causing her to become severely dehydrated.  

Julio allegedly found her collapsed in their home and called 911. On the ride to the hospital, CG went into cardiac arrest.

Doctors discovered she was suffering from acute hypernatremia, which is when there is a high sodium presence in the blood.

Federal Dietary Guidelines recommend not consuming more than 2,300 milligrams, or 2.5 grams, of salt per day.  

Dr Bernard explains that a lethal dose of sodium is 40 grams. He says the liter of soy sauce CG drank contained 200 grams of salt, which is five times the lethal amount.  

He said the soy sauce cleanse is a hoax based on 'half-truths'.  

'The correct part is that wherever sodium is, water will flow towards it,' Dr Bernard says in the video.

'CG was told the soy sauce would stay in her colon. Toxin-filled water would then flow in and she'd be cleansed, but that's not how it happens.'

Anything we digest first passes through the stomach before reaching the intestines and the colon. 

Water flows toward sodium - so the soy sauce in CG's stomach started sucking water from her muscles and organs. 

This means her kidneys, heart and brain became dehydrated as the blood vessels shrank and deprived them of oxygen. 

Doctors pumped water mixed with glucose into her blood to try to dilute the massive quantities of salt. 

Over the next three days, the treatment seemed to be working, as CG drifted in and out consciousness.

However, on the fourth day, she was unable to speak, swallow or move her arms and legs. 

Doctors determined she had central pontine myelinolysis, a neurological disorder that occurs when nerve cells cannot properly transmit signals to each other.

The myelin sheath, an insulating barrier of fatty protein that protects the nerves, is destroyed in the middle of the brain stem, known as the pons. 

According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, this occurs when there is a rapid change in the body's sodium levels, such as when there is a high level of sodium in the body that is corrected too quickly - like in CG's case. 

Symptoms include confusion, problems swallowing, slurred speech, reduced alertness and paralysis, all experienced by CG.  

Dr Bernard says in most cases, if we drank as much soy sauce as CG did, we would end up vomiting.   

'CG had some quality to her that could separate her mind from drinking soy sauce,' he said.

He believes she had undiagnosed celiac disease, which is a genetic autoimmune disorder where the ingestion of gluten leads to damage in the small intestine. 

Dr Bernard says all the white bread she was eating on her restricted diet, despite her gluten sensitivity, may have aggravated her disease, which led to her becoming delusional and falling victim to the soy sauce colon cleanse hoax.

Source: dailymail.co.uk

Follow NEWS.am Medicine on Facebook and Twitter


 
  • Video
 
 
  • Event calendar
 
 
  • Archive
 
  • Most read
 
  • Find us on Facebook
 
  • Poll
Are you aware that in 2027 medical insurance will become mandatory for all Armenian citizens?
I’m aware, and I'm in favor
I’m not aware, and I'm against
I'm aware, but I'm still undecided
I'm not aware, but in principle I'm in favor
I'm not aware, but in principle I'm against
It doesn't matter to me