Khayat Moath Abdullah, Khayat Hassan, Alhantoobi Mohamed Rashed, Aljoghaiman Majid, Sommer Doron D, Algird Almunder, Guha Daipayan
Department of Medical, Um al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Neurosurgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
Surg Neurol Int. 2024 Feb 9;15:35. doi: 10.25259/SNI_574_2023. eCollection 2024.
Low-energy penetrating head injuries caused by arrows are relatively uncommon. The objective of this report is to describe a case presentation and management of self-inflicted intracranial injury using a crossbow and to provide a relevant literature review.
A 31-year-old man with a previous psychiatric history sustained a self-inflicted injury using a crossbow that he bought from a department store. The patient arrived neurologically intact at the hospital, fully awake and oriented. He was not able to verbalize due to immobilization of the jaw as well as fixation of his tongue to his hard palate secondary to the position of the arrow. The trajectory of the object showed an entry point at the floor of the oral cavity and an exit through the calvarium just off the midline. The oral and nasal cavity, along with the palate and, the skull base of the anterior cranial fossa, and the left frontal lobe, were all breached. No vascular injury was identified clinically or in imaging. The arrow was surgically removed in the operating room after establishing an elective surgical airway. The floor of the mouth, tongue, and palate was repaired next. A planned delayed cerebrospinal fluid leak repair was performed. The patient made a substantial recovery and was discharged home in good functional status. A systematic literature search was done using Medline for cases with intracranial injuries related to crossbows to review and appraise the available literature.
A thorough assessment in a multidisciplinary trauma center and the availability of a subspecialty care team, including neurosurgery and otolaryngology, are paramount in such cases. The vascular imaging should be done before and after any planned surgical intervention. Emergent and elective surgical airway management should be considered and made available throughout the stabilization and care of the acute injury. Surgical management should be planned to remove the object with adequate exposure to facilitate visualization, removal, and the possible need for further intervention, including anticipating aerodigestive and vascular injuries on removal. Finally, access to weapons and the relation to psychiatric illness should not be overlooked, as many reported cases are self-harming in nature.
箭造成的低能量穿透性头部损伤相对少见。本报告的目的是描述一例使用弩造成的自伤性颅内损伤的病例及处理过程,并进行相关文献综述。
一名有精神病史的31岁男性使用从百货商店购买的弩造成了自伤。患者到达医院时神经功能完好,完全清醒且定向力正常。由于下颌固定以及箭的位置导致舌头固定于硬腭,患者无法言语。物体的轨迹显示入口位于口腔底部,出口位于颅骨中线旁的颅盖骨。口腔、鼻腔、腭、前颅窝颅底及左额叶均有破损。临床及影像学检查均未发现血管损伤。在建立择期手术气道后,在手术室通过手术取出了箭。接下来修复了口腔底部、舌头和腭。计划进行延迟性脑脊液漏修补术。患者恢复良好,出院时功能状态良好。使用Medline对与弩相关的颅内损伤病例进行了系统的文献检索,以回顾和评估现有文献。
在多学科创伤中心进行全面评估以及有包括神经外科和耳鼻喉科在内的专科护理团队至关重要。在任何计划的手术干预前后均应进行血管成像检查。在急性损伤的稳定和护理过程中,应考虑并提供紧急和择期手术气道管理。应规划手术管理以充分暴露取出物体,便于可视化、取出以及可能的进一步干预,包括预计取出时的气道消化道和血管损伤。最后,获取武器与精神疾病的关系不应被忽视,因为许多报告的病例本质上是自残行为。