Many children like to eat snacks, and parents often control their children to eat snacks for fear that their children will have problems. After eating snacks, the boy urinated the next day. The urine was reddish brown, just like the color of soy sauce, which made his parents feel very scared. They were worried that their child was seriously ill and went to the hospital at once.
The result of the examination in the hospital is that the child's illness is medically called hemolysis. Fortunately, parents treated it in time, otherwise the child will be more serious in the future. The child's skin has turned pale now and his eyes have a yellow film. Is the child's illness what everyone often says? Bean disease? When eating snacks with children, I ate too many broad beans. So you can't eat broad beans anymore?
The answer is no, not because eating broad beans will cause people to get this? Bean disease? But because some people have congenital genetic defects, eating broad beans can induce hemolytic anemia. Most of the cases found so far are related to eating fresh broad beans.
This physiological defect is mainly due to the lack of a normal mold (G6PD) on the erythrocyte membrane, and there is no cure for this disease at present.
Most patients with congenital G6PD deficiency will have acute hemolytic anemia within one or two days after eating fresh broad beans, and the symptoms can appear as soon as two hours later.
However, when the disease does not occur, it is the same as normal people, so don't worry too much. Can't broad beans induce it? Bean disease?
People with congenital G6PD deficiency of red blood cells may get sick within a few minutes if they inhale pollen, which is faster than eating fresh broad beans. At the same time, bean paste and vermicelli products of broad beans can also induce diseases.
Some drugs can't be eaten, such as quinine, an antimalarial drug, and phenacetin, which has antipyretic effect. Mothballs contain naphthalene, which can also cause hemolytic anemia.
These things mentioned are for people with congenital G6PD deficiency, and normal people can eat them.
There is no good medical treatment for this disease, and the best way is to prevent it. No contact with substances that induce acute hemolytic anemia is not a big problem and will not bring too much trouble to life. Eating snacks is very popular not only among children but also among adults. However, no matter what kind of food, I think it is absolutely right to eat less. Many parents will control their children to eat snacks and rarely buy them. This is not a problem that they can't afford, but really for the sake of children's health.