Background: Pin-site myiasis is a rare complication of external fixation of open fractures of the tibia.
Methods: Case report and literature review.
Results: A 32 year-old man with a history of alcohol and drug abuse presented with an open fracture of the middle third of the fibula and tibia (Gustilo type IIIA) after a motor vehicle crash. Definitive surgical correction of the fracture was made with the insertion of an external skeletal fixator, type Baummer, with 2 bars, 6 pins, and 12 rotules. After three weeks, he presented again with a primary complaint of purulent secretion and maggots at the distal pin site. On removal of the pin, significant destruction of peripheral tissue was evidenced, with a wound approximately 5 cm diameter, from which 105 maggots were extracted, being identified as Cochliomyia hominivorax.
Conclusions: There have been no previous reports of myiasis involving an external skeletal fixation and pin, and only one similar case has been reported in a patient with a halo orthosis for the management of a gunshot wound of the neck. As in that case, presumably, in our patient, myiasis occurred via the small infected wound adjacent to the distal pin. Adequate treatment for myiasis requires complete removal of the maggots, as well as antimicrobial therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/sur.2007.045 | DOI Listing |
Pin-site myiasis is an underreported complication of surgical interventions. We present a case of myiasis caused by the New World screwworm fly (Cochliomyia hominivorax) in a pin site of a chronic nonhealed wound 12 years after the intervention. This infection apparently was the result of poor perfusion of the leg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Infect (Larchmt)
June 2008
Traumatology Service, Hospital Dr. Rafael Medina Jiménez, Pariata, Vargas, Caracas, Venezuela.
Background: Pin-site myiasis is a rare complication of external fixation of open fractures of the tibia.
Methods: Case report and literature review.
Results: A 32 year-old man with a history of alcohol and drug abuse presented with an open fracture of the middle third of the fibula and tibia (Gustilo type IIIA) after a motor vehicle crash.
Spinal Cord
November 2005
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0338, USA.
Study Design: Case report.
Objective: To report a rare complication following halo placement for cervical fracture.
Setting: United States University Teaching Hospital.
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