Rescuers arrive to free trapped man as he finishes amputating his own arm.

Gagh

Χριστόφορος
I didn't think I needed to change the headline:

An American man is recovering after cutting his own arm off after it became stuck in a broken furnace in his basement.

Jonathan Metz started cutting three days after becoming stuck while he tried to fix the unit, as he began to smell his flesh rotting.

The 31-year-old had almost cut through the limb when rescuers arrived, his friends having raised the alarm when he failed to arrive at work and a softball game.

Police forced their way into his Hartford, Connecticut, apartment and found him in agony, his severed arm having succumbed to gangrene. The amputation was completed in hospital.

'There was a little bit of fat that remained and he was in and out of consciousness,' said Dr Scott Ellner, Metz's surgeon at Hartford's Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center.

'It sounds like maybe there was a nerve there that prevented him from completing the amputation.'

Metz, who lives alone, had been trying to replace the boiler fins on his furnace on Sunday when his arm became trapped.

Friend Luca DiGregorio said he and other friends grew worried when Metz failed to attend work or social engagements.

Metz also did not answer the doorbell when DiGregorio visited his home on Wednesday, where he said he saw Metz's dog 'yipping at the back door'. DiGregorio called police, who found Metz in the basement.

'I was a little worried, especially when the first cop showed up,' DiGregorio said. 'Then more showed up, and then the ambulance showed up, so it got a little nerve-racking.'

Firefighters ripped apart the furnace with heavy tools, including a spreader normally used to take the door off a car.

Once they did so, the arm 'just gave away, because his arm was already infected and the tissue was non-viable', fire chiefs said.

Officials didn't know what type of tools Metz used to attempt the amputation, saying he was mumbling during the rescue operation.

They said Metz drank some of the water that had leaked from the furnace to help him stay alive.

Dr David Shapiro, a trauma specialist who also operated on Metz, said he could not have lived much longer. 'I've never experienced somebody who had the ability to go through something like this,' Dr Ellner said.

'He provides a lot of inspiration for myself, not just as a physician but as a human being.'

Dr Shapiro said that although there was still some concern about infection, Metz was expected to survive.

He will have to undergo more surgery to prepare the arm for a prosthetic.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/wor...ected-survive-amputating-arm-free-boiler.html
 

Donovan

beer, I want beer
This would be amazing if were the first time some American had done it. But Aron Ralston did it in a canyon, wrapped it up and walked a couple miles down the canyon, essentially finishing his solo hike before he found help.

America. We grow them HARD over here.
 

Fuddlemiff

Is this real life?
Yeah, that story came to mind for me as well. Maybe this guy had heard about the canyon dude as well and thought it'd be easier.

Still, you can do remarkable things when you've got adrenaline rushing through you, so in some ways these stories don't surprise me. I imagine the crucial thing is to complete your makeshift procedure before the adrenaline wears off, or you go into shock or whatever.
 

whisky

Boobie inspector
If theres no blood going to it, then yes.

Its essentially a bit of a dead body still attached to a living one.
 

Mirah

I love you
Srsly. Wow. I never want to be in this situation then. I must read the "Life or death situations" handbook after all.

And water-unless you are in shock from blood loss or something-but really? Can't you survive with no water for a while too?

3 days?
 

Fuddlemiff

Is this real life?
I think two or three days is about the longest you can go without water before it seriously affects you. It'd probably kill a lot of people, but then you do hear about people buried during earthquakes who survive on very little water indeed even after two weeks or so.

Of course, for blokes we have the option of drinking our own urine without too much kerfuffle, provided we have one hand free, can get in an adequate position and can build up enough pressure to direct it into our mouths.
 

Donovan

beer, I want beer
Ralston wrote a book called Rock and a Hard Place that detailed his event. I heard him do an interview, he was amazingly low-key and down to earth as he described what he had to do. Story was incredible...
 

Kitty

Sinless and Purrfect
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Donovan

beer, I want beer
On the other hand, the USA may have a two-nil lead in the do-it-yourself amputation race, but England has a couple of hardasses too. Like Joe Simpson, who was dropped off a cliff at the top of a glacial mountian, swallowed into an ice cave, shat out the other side, and basically hopped several miles and crawled on a badly shattered leg, all the while his friend thinking he was dead and packing up to leave the desolate camp. They even burned all his clothes. His story was a book and movie called Touching the Void, and if you ever feel like giving up because times are just too tough, I recommend watching it (and the Ralston one when it comes out).
 
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