A man in Rome was wrongly removed after a hospital confuses him for a patient suffering from a fatal tumor.
The anonymous 35 -year -old had gone to the Umberto Dental Clinic in the Italian capital on May 20 to remove his wisdom tooth as well as a bladder in his mouth.
Dentists in the clinic biopsy of the bladder, but the results were reported to those of a man suffering from malignant tumor in his jaw.
So when the patient – who was in good health – returned to the clinic a few weeks later to collect his results, was shocked to find out that growth was cancerous.
Due to the aggressive nature of the tumor, the doctors told him that he should undergo jaws as well as chemotherapy.
Surgery left him permanently harm to his face, including paralysis on the right side of his mouth.
But a month after business, when doctors conducted surveillance tests, they were more overwhelmed to find out that the results for the deadly tumor had come back negatively.
Doctors told him that chemotherapy was no longer necessary, which made him a suspect for the legality of the results.
A man in Rome was wrongly removed after a hospital confuses him for a patient suffering from a fatal tumor. The mistake was made at Umberto I Dental Clinic (depicted)

Picture: Colloseum in Rome. Since then the patient has filed a complaint about his permanent injuries and his case is now taken over by the prosecutor’s office in Rome.

Surgery left the patient with permanent damage to his or her face, including paralysis on the right side of his mouth
Wanting a second opinion, the patient took the DNA of the biological material controlled by a laboratory at the Catholic University of Rome.
The results confirmed that it actually does not suffer from a deadly tumor, implying that the surgery it suffered was never necessary.
Speaking to the Italian news agency Corriere della Serra, the man said: “Even now I can’t describe the state of my mind. I am alive, I am healthy, I have no deadly illness, but I have suffered a lot.
Since then the patient has filed a complaint about his permanent injuries and his case is now taken over by the prosecutor’s office in Rome.
A survey continues at the moment to understand exactly how the mistake was made and who is to blame for the mixture.
This is just the last example of medical negligence.
In 2017, a woman sued the NHS after a surgeon that worked on the wrong side of her body and possibly hurt a healthy kidney.
Lauren Hodgson, 29, had to undergo a secondary operation to remove a stone in her left kidney at Milton Keynes Hospital in March of that year.
But an involvement by an inexperienced surgeon, described in medical terminology as a “never -event”, meant that the right kidney worked instead.
Lauren was left with low blood pressure, a sign that the kidneys were not working properly and had to take time from her work as a support worker.
He said: “Wait to take care of the hospital, not for something as if it happened.
“This happened in a university teaching hospital that trains people to be surgeons.
“If they can’t do it right, who can you rely on? My life may never be the same again. ”