Earlier this week the New England Journal of Medicine tweeted a photo of what looked like a beautiful piece of bright red coral to their 545,000 followers.
But it wasn't a piece of coral, or even something doctors had removed themselves — it was an intact, perfectly formed blood clot cast that a patient had spat up after "an extreme bout of coughing".
In a medically-worded tweet, the NEJM explained what happened, reports news.com.au.
"A 36-year-old man was admitted to the ICU with an acute exacerbation of chronic heart failure. After a ventricular assist device was placed and anticoagulation therapy initiated, haemoptysis developed, and he expectorated a cast of the right bronchial tree," the journal wrote.
In other words, the man was rushed to hospital with chronic heart failure and to help his heart, doctors at the University of California — where the man was admitted — connected him to a machine designed to maximise blood flow around the body.