How would I know if I had a tapeworm

How would I know if I had a tapeworm


Twinkies and tapeworms: 7 quirky (and risky) diets you probably shouldn't try - Chicago Tribune

Posted: 29 Jan 2019 12:00 AM PST

Welcome to diet season, that time of year when people are looking for a reset after the overconsumption of the holidays.

There is a smorgasbord of choices for those who are looking to lose weight or stave off a winter doldrums gain, and a few of them actually do work. Some of the trendiest weight-loss schemes, from intermittent fasting to Tom Brady's alkaline diet, might seem a bit odd or excessive - until you consider some of the crazy or even dangerous things (tapeworms anyone?) we've done in the past to lose weight.

But first, a little history about weight and weight loss in the United States. Before the 20th century, few people cared whether a person put on a few pounds. An ample middle was seen as a sign of prosperity and good health. Joan Jacobs Brumberg, author of "The Body Project: An Intimate History of American Girls," says Americans were "uncomfortable with extreme thinness, because it signaled wasting diseases" such as tuberculosis and cancer.

Then several things changed that view.

The tapeworm cure. Khloé Kardashian might have been joking when she said, "I would do anything to get a tapeworm" to help her lose weight, but Victorian women took this approach seriously and even some contemporary dieters have tried it. The concept is that a tapeworm living in the intestines consumes calories that might otherwise feed the human host. Elizabeth Tucker, co-author of "Folk Culture in the Digital Age," said by email that she investigated a doctor in Tijuana who offered to provide tapeworms for weight loss if she would come to Mexico for them. She says she declined because she served in Africa as a Peace Corps volunteer and knew that ingesting worms "could have pretty bad consequences," including causing intestinal blockage and damage to the brain, liver and eyes. Tucker says there was even an episode about death from tapeworm ingestion on the TV show "1000 Ways to Die." She adds, "tapeworms appeal to us because they seem like tiny friends who eat up all the food that isn't good for us." On the negative side, the parasites might damage or kill you. Oh, and there's no evidence the tapeworm diet actually ever worked.

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