Neanderthals exist after near deletion, evolving right through humans ancestry - living, smiling
Neanderthals exist after near deletion, evolving right through humans ancestry - living, smiling
nachos and chips have organic sodium
smiled meekly in lift, emitting discharge....
discharge includes secretions churning heinously, allowing rampant gurgling emissions
emissions may inadvertently suddenly squirt into old natalies squeezebox.
squeezebox quietly uses extra ears zealously ensuring bemoaning otters' xeroxes
sorry
Xeroxes' expected redundancies? Older Xerox employees smirked.
Smirked mutterings invariably reflect knockers' essential destructiveness.
destructiveness ended southern thailands radical urban centre traffic-system in vindictively enforced nitpicking, exposing scheming sycophants.
sycophants yesterday; converted, obsequious parasitic hairdressers are now today's synonyms.
Synonyms you now offer needlessly yammered, make sense.
Sense enters noggin, stunning ENTymologist
Entymologist needlessly tasted your massive omelette. Later orange gas inflated stomach transverse.
transverse rectal aneurysm nearly severed Victors enlarged right scrotal epididymis.
epididymis pain increased decidedly, including duodenal yowlings.... meaning intense Strongyloidiasis *
* An infestation of the intestines by the parasitic worm. It is widespread in the tropics. Strongyloidiasis is contracted in affected areas by walking barefoot on soil contaminated with faeces. Larvae penetrate the soles, migrating via the lungs and throat to the intestine. Here they develop into adults and produce larvae. Most larvae are passed in the faeces, but some enter the skin around the anus to begin a new cycle. A person may be infested for more than 40 years. The larvae cause itching and red weals where they enter the skin. In the lungs they may cause asthma or pneumonia. Heavy intestinal infestation may cause swelling of the abdomen and diarrhoea. Occasionally, an infected person with reduced immunity dies of complications, such as septicaemia or meningitis. Treatment with an anthelmintic drug, usually tiabendazole, kills the worms.
Diagnosis rests on the microscopic identification of larvae (rhabditiform and occasionally filariform) in the stool or duodenal fluid.
Last edited by Latindancer; 06-02-2017 at 06:20 AM.
Strongyloidiasis? That's really outlandish. Now, given you like oddities, I declare it a superb introductory submission.
Frigging heck !
(Note to self : never try to get the better of happynz. It'd be like trying to spar with a 6th dan black belt. Though if I was lucky, he might give me an "introductory submission")
Strongyloidiasis tortured old normans gastrics yesterday. locum orthopaedic intern diagnosed intestinal aneurysm suggesting infestation syndrome.
syndrome yonder, never deters relatively old MILFs, ever
Ever verify ENT's recidivism ?
Recidivism evidently concerns individuals done incarcerating, volitionally incarcerated some more.
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