Queen Elizabeth II Hospitalized Over Stomach Illness
AFRIK UPDATE
The symptoms of gastroenteritis — vomiting and diarrhea — usually pass after one or two days, although they can be more severe in older or otherwise vulnerable people. Dehydration is a common complication.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II was
hospitalized Sunday over an apparent stomach infection that has ailed her for
days, a rare instance of ill health sidelining the long-reigning monarch.
Elizabeth will have to cancel a visit to Rome and other engagements as she
recovers, and outside experts said she may have to be rehydrated intravenously.
Buckingham Palace said the 86-year-old queen had experienced
symptoms of gastroenteritis and was being examined at London's King Edward VII
Hospital — the first time in a decade that Elizabeth has been hospitalized.
The symptoms of gastroenteritis — vomiting and diarrhea — usually pass after one or two days, although they can be more severe in older or otherwise vulnerable people. Dehydration is a common complication.
The illness was first announced Friday, and Elizabeth had to
cancel a visit Swansea, Wales, on Saturday to present leeks — a national symbol
— to soldiers of the Royal Welsh Regiment in honor of Wales' national day, St.
David's Day. She instead spent the day trying to recover at Windsor Castle, but
appears to have had trouble kicking the bug.
A doctor not involved in the queen's treatment said that if
medical officials determined that she is losing too much fluid, she would be
rehydrated intravenously.
"Not everyone can keep up with oral hydration so it is pretty
routine to go to hospital and have a drip and wait for the thing to pass and
keep yourself hydrated," said Dr. Christopher Hawkey of the University of
Nottingham's faculty of medicine and health sciences.
Britain's National Health
Service says that the two most common causes of gastroenteritis in adults are
food poisoning and the norovirus, a common winter vomiting bug which typically
afflicts between 600,000 and 1 million Britons each year. British health
guidelines advise that people with the norovirus avoid work for at least two
days.
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