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October 29, 2007
After being named the hot dog king, 23-year-old Joey Chestnut proved Sunday that he is also hungry for hamburgers. Chestnut gobbled down 103 small hamburgers in just eight minutes, going home not only with a full stomach but also $10,000 richer. More importantly, he set a new world record.
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October 17, 2007
Topics doctors, woman, teeth, pain, bad, doctor, india, hand, paper, feet, death and hospital
Doctors in India have removed a 3-inch toothbrush lodged inside the nose of a 31-year old woman, a local paper reported. The report said that the housewife went to a hospital in Mumbai two months ago suffering from severe pain.
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September 28, 2007
Topics marijuana, medical, california, candy, chocolate, pain, smoke, people, cookies, lawyers, cbs, seattle, plants, clubs, pot, bars, angeles, ice, news and world
Patients around the world relying on a little feel-good pain relief from nibbling on marijuana-laced snacks baked at a California factory will be out of luck because federal agents closed it down. Drug Enforcement Administration officials said agents raided the Tainted Inc. factory in Oakland on Wednesday and arrested several people. They also seized 460 marijuana plants along with a variety of pot-laced products intended for medical users of the drug. Those products included such things as barbecue sauce, chocolate-covered pretzels, candy bars, cookies, marshmallow pies, ice cream, peanut butter, jelly, energy drinks and "Rice Krispy treats. "
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September 18, 2007
A 33-year-old Venezuelan man who had been declared clinically dead woke up in the morgue after feeling excruciating pain when medical examiners started to autopsy his body. The man identified as Carlos Camejo, was taken to the morgue after he was declared dead in a highway accident. When examiners started to autopsy his body, they realized something went wrong and he started to bleed. Examiners quickly stitched up the cut on his face.
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September 5, 2007
A 23-year-old heart transplant patient has finally seen her old heart at a London exhibition. Heart transplant patient Jennifer Sutton suffered from restrictive cardiomyophathy since her late teens and donated her old heart to the Wellcome Collection after she received a transplant. "It was slightly surreal but amazing at the same time to see the object that had caused me so much pain and anguish," Sutton said. "I was really curious and excited to see it but at the same time I am trying to love the heart I have now. "
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