Cargando…

A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower

INTRODUCTION: Outside of war regions, penetrating neck injury is rare. Penetrating neck injury due to a lawnmower has never been described, despite the annual 74.000 injuries caused by lawnmowers in the United States. In this report, the case of a 65-year old women, admitted after a penetrating neck...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Quax, Marcel L.J., Eefting, Daniel, Jansen, Jeroen C., Blok, Joris J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7750575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33364293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tcr.2020.100379
_version_ 1783625515410653184
author Quax, Marcel L.J.
Eefting, Daniel
Jansen, Jeroen C.
Blok, Joris J.
author_facet Quax, Marcel L.J.
Eefting, Daniel
Jansen, Jeroen C.
Blok, Joris J.
author_sort Quax, Marcel L.J.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Outside of war regions, penetrating neck injury is rare. Penetrating neck injury due to a lawnmower has never been described, despite the annual 74.000 injuries caused by lawnmowers in the United States. In this report, the case of a 65-year old women, admitted after a penetrating neck injury due to a metal piece shot from a lawnmower, is described. REPORT: A 65-year old women, with no relevant medical history, presented at the Emergency Department after she was hit in the neck by an iron projectile shot from a professional lawnmower. On site, the projectile, a metal part from the lawnmower blade, was removed by her husband. CT scan showed a pneumomediastinum, without signs of vascular injury. Surgical exploration was immediately performed in the operation room (OR). No vascular or esophageal injuries werefound, only lacerated neck muscles. Perioperatively, the ENT surgeon performed an endoscopy, which showed a small injury of the hypopharynx. Postoperatively, the patient was prophylactically treated with antibiotics for 7 days. Patient was discharged in good clinical condition after 7 days, without complications. CONCLUSION: In this report we present a case with a sharp traumatic injury of the neck, caused by a metal projectile shot from a lawnmower. The laceration of the pharynx was explored in the OR by the ENT- and vascular surgeon. The pneumomediastinum was treated with prophylactic antibiotics. Currently the patient is doing fine without any complications of the injury. Traumatic injury of the neck requires direct direct surgical exploration, however, when patients present hemodynamically stable, a neck CTA will add to the diagnosis (e.g. a pneumomediastium).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7750575
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77505752020-12-23 A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower Quax, Marcel L.J. Eefting, Daniel Jansen, Jeroen C. Blok, Joris J. Trauma Case Rep Case Report INTRODUCTION: Outside of war regions, penetrating neck injury is rare. Penetrating neck injury due to a lawnmower has never been described, despite the annual 74.000 injuries caused by lawnmowers in the United States. In this report, the case of a 65-year old women, admitted after a penetrating neck injury due to a metal piece shot from a lawnmower, is described. REPORT: A 65-year old women, with no relevant medical history, presented at the Emergency Department after she was hit in the neck by an iron projectile shot from a professional lawnmower. On site, the projectile, a metal part from the lawnmower blade, was removed by her husband. CT scan showed a pneumomediastinum, without signs of vascular injury. Surgical exploration was immediately performed in the operation room (OR). No vascular or esophageal injuries werefound, only lacerated neck muscles. Perioperatively, the ENT surgeon performed an endoscopy, which showed a small injury of the hypopharynx. Postoperatively, the patient was prophylactically treated with antibiotics for 7 days. Patient was discharged in good clinical condition after 7 days, without complications. CONCLUSION: In this report we present a case with a sharp traumatic injury of the neck, caused by a metal projectile shot from a lawnmower. The laceration of the pharynx was explored in the OR by the ENT- and vascular surgeon. The pneumomediastinum was treated with prophylactic antibiotics. Currently the patient is doing fine without any complications of the injury. Traumatic injury of the neck requires direct direct surgical exploration, however, when patients present hemodynamically stable, a neck CTA will add to the diagnosis (e.g. a pneumomediastium). Elsevier 2020-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7750575/ /pubmed/33364293 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tcr.2020.100379 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Quax, Marcel L.J.
Eefting, Daniel
Jansen, Jeroen C.
Blok, Joris J.
A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title_full A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title_fullStr A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title_full_unstemmed A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title_short A ‘Final Destination injury’: Penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
title_sort ‘final destination injury’: penetrating trauma of the neck and a pneumomediastinum by a metal part shot from a lawnmower
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7750575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33364293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tcr.2020.100379
work_keys_str_mv AT quaxmarcellj afinaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT eeftingdaniel afinaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT jansenjeroenc afinaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT blokjorisj afinaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT quaxmarcellj finaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT eeftingdaniel finaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT jansenjeroenc finaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower
AT blokjorisj finaldestinationinjurypenetratingtraumaoftheneckandapneumomediastinumbyametalpartshotfromalawnmower