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Penetrating Thoracic Ice Pick Injury Extending into Pulmonary Artery: Report of a Case

Overview
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2018 Oct 16
PMID 30321827
Citations 2
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Abstract

Introduction: Penetrating thoracic traumas have a wide spectrum, ranging from mild traumas to life-threatening injuries.

Presentation Of Case: This paper illustrates a 40-year-old male with a penetrating pulmonary artery injury that was successfully treated with emergency surgery. The patient visited local hospital by foot complaining of moving object on his chest and was found that an ice pick was penetrating the man's left chest. An ambulance took the patient to our emergency department. Computed tomography of the chest showed linear metallic density in the pulmonary trunk and a small amount of pericardial fluid. Emergency surgery for removal of the object and repair of the pulmonary artery was performed. The ice pick had been stuck in the main pulmonary artery through the pericardium without any injury to the left lung or internal thoracic artery. Postoperative course was uneventful.

Discussion: A multidisciplinary team designed our treatment strategy, enabling us to select the optimal treatment, including diagnostic techniques and surgical approach. A successful trauma management depends on whether a life-threatening conditionexists. Major vascular injury should be rapidly assessed in these cases. Psychiatric aspects of the case are also discussed.

Conclusion: Early removal of the foreign body is recommended to prevent further damage to the heart.

Citing Articles

Value of multiplanar reconstruction in multi-slice computed tomography for the detection of foreign body in the pulmonary artery: a case report.

Mao Q, Lv Z, Han Q, Zhang W J Int Med Res. 2024; 52(3):3000605241237890.

PMID: 38497130 PMC: 10946078. DOI: 10.1177/03000605241237890.


Accidental neck and chest penetration by a metal sliver derived from an axe for wood chopping: a case report.

Corzani R, De Leonibus L, Luzzi L, Ghisalberti M, Meniconi F, Ligabue T J Med Case Rep. 2019; 13(1):255.

PMID: 31420009 PMC: 6697975. DOI: 10.1186/s13256-019-2184-7.

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