HomeNewsTrendsMan gets 'hairy, green tongue' due to smoking and simultaneous antibiotics use

Man gets 'hairy, green tongue' due to smoking and simultaneous antibiotics use

The condition of hairy tongue is more prevalent in adults over 40 and particularly in men, and can be aggravated by smoking.

July 13, 2023 / 16:20 IST
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Doctors diagnosed the man's green tongue with a condition known as 'hairy tongue'. (Image: The New England Journal of Medicine)
Doctors diagnosed the man's green tongue with a condition known as 'hairy tongue'. (Image: The New England Journal of Medicine)

In a rare medical case, an American man's tongue underwent a startling transformation, turning green and sprouting a hairy coat. The bizarre occurrence was allegedly triggered by the man smoking cigarettes while concurrently taking antibiotics. The details of this rare condition were recently published in the renowned New England Journal of Medicine.

The unidentified 64-year-old patient from Ohio sought medical attention several weeks after noticing a dramatic change in the appearance of his tongue, which had transformed into a tufty emerald organ.

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Doctors diagnosed him with a condition known as "hairy tongue," characterized by an abnormal coating of skin cells on the tongue's surface. This happens when the filiform papillae, small conical protrusions that contain taste buds, become enlarged and discoloured due to a buildup of debris and bacteria, New York Post reported.

The appearance of hair-like structures on the tongue is a result of this enlargement, with some strands growing up to an inch if not regularly scraped. These elongated papillae act as traps, collecting various substances such as bacteria, food particles, and yeast, resembling an oral gill net, according to reports from the Daily Mail.