Technology2 mins ago
Need some serious advice please.
6 Answers
I went for a pee about 45 minutes ago and before I had a pee there was a thin pinkish worm about 4''/5'' long in the toilet water pan wriggling about.
It has has really freaked me out that it could have come from me early on, or could it have crawled up the waste pipe.
It is still there now, what do you think I should do?
It has has really freaked me out that it could have come from me early on, or could it have crawled up the waste pipe.
It is still there now, what do you think I should do?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by toptom. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.someone may well have worms from undercooked food, for instance - not necessarily lethal
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/ruth.livingstone/lit tle/thread.htm
(maybe you shouldn't look at the picture!)
Generally easily treated, but see a doctor quickly as they can spread round the household
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/ruth.livingstone/lit tle/thread.htm
(maybe you shouldn't look at the picture!)
Generally easily treated, but see a doctor quickly as they can spread round the household
actally, maybe threadworms are too small to be what you've seen. It might just be an ordinary worm:
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Home-and-Garden /Question310290.html
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Home-and-Garden /Question310290.html
-- answer removed --
This sounds horrid I know but can you catch it in a container and keep it? Seriously - and don't worry about the pee, a lab has always seen worse.
Could this have been a nemotode worm? I think if anything had been in your bladder / urinary tract that shouldn't be there, you would have felt at least some unusual sensations if not pain. So if it is a nematode, and big enough to see, it is more likely to have come into your water system than from your body. Having said that different species are parasitical to humans but are usually v tiny.
This is why you need the creature to be identified. If it has got into your water supply this implies some kind of pollution and your water supply company may need to take action - or your own house system may need investigation eg has a pigeon sh@t in your header tank etc
Local environmental health dept at the council might be a good first start.
From experience, I would suggest if you rely on your water company alone they will see this purely in terms of hushing up bad publicity and so you need a neutral body such as the council to help you out.
Could this have been a nemotode worm? I think if anything had been in your bladder / urinary tract that shouldn't be there, you would have felt at least some unusual sensations if not pain. So if it is a nematode, and big enough to see, it is more likely to have come into your water system than from your body. Having said that different species are parasitical to humans but are usually v tiny.
This is why you need the creature to be identified. If it has got into your water supply this implies some kind of pollution and your water supply company may need to take action - or your own house system may need investigation eg has a pigeon sh@t in your header tank etc
Local environmental health dept at the council might be a good first start.
From experience, I would suggest if you rely on your water company alone they will see this purely in terms of hushing up bad publicity and so you need a neutral body such as the council to help you out.