The patient, an Oman Military Service personnel, had flew in to Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre here recently from Muscat after several hospitalisations for repeated pneumonia during the past several years.
The fish bone measuring 1.5 cm x 1.4 cm tucked away within the lower lobe of the right lung was removed successfully and the pus formed around it drained out, the hospital said in a release today.
"It was life-threatening. A foreign body made it difficult for the person to bring out secretion. Behind the foreign body, there was pus formation and it could not come out. The lung behind it had become necrotic," said Dr Arun Nair, Head of Interventional Pulmonary Department at Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences & Research Centre.
"When there is a foreign body in the lung, the lung gets destroyed. When the lung get destroyed, there could be pus formation, infection and over a period of time it could cause irreparable damage," Nair said.
"It is unusual to have a foreign body remained undetected for seven years and removing it after such a long time was challenging, as there was excessive tissue growth around the foreign body," he said.
