| Literature DB >> 21326848 |
F Edwin1, M Tettey, L Sereboe, E Aniteye, D Kotei, M Tamatey, K Entsuamensah, I Delia, K Frimpong-Boateng.
Abstract
Impalement injuries of the chest are uncommon in civilian practice with few reports in the literature. We report three cases of thoracic impalement seen over a 5 year period with unusual underlying mechanisms. In two of the cases, the impalement was obvious; in the third, the impalement was concealed having occurred 5 months earlier. In Case 1, the underlying mechanism was a high-speed road traffic accident. The patient was impaled by a metallic square pipe piled by the roadside. In Case 2, the gun-housing of a locally-made rifle gave way as it was fired and allowed a reverse ejection of the barrel during recoil that impaled the hunter's chest. In Case 3, a domestic assault with an old umbrella caused an impalement injury as one of the umbrella spokes broke off, penetrated and lodged in the left chest going unnoticed for 5 months. Persistent chest pain and haemoptysis led to a request for chest radiographic examination upon which the foreign body was discovered. Massive haemoptysis brought the patient to emergency thoracotomy. All three patients underwent thoracotomy with a successful outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Impalement injuries; debridement; management; mechanisms; thoracic
Year: 2009 PMID: 21326848 PMCID: PMC3039238 DOI: 10.4314/gmj.v43i2.55320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ghana Med J ISSN: 0016-9560