Traumatic stab injury/wounds to the brain are rare type of injuries having fatal outcomes. In the present case report, we report a case of a 17-year-old male who presented to the accident and emergency department of our hospital with an alleged history of assault due to a vegetable cutting knife with the knife lying in the right temporal region. In these types of injuries, no attempt should be made to remove the weapon without adequate investigations and facilities as it can be fatal. While removing the weapon, care should be taken that there is no rocking or zigzag movement and the weapon should be retrieved back from the same trajectory. The underlying principles in these types of cases include thorough debridement of the wound with removal of dead tissue with no rocking movement while retrieving the weapon. The wound should be thoroughly closed to prevent postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leak.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ajns.AJNS_89_16 | DOI Listing |
Asian J Neurosurg
October 2020
Department of Neurosurgery, Dayanand Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana, Punjab, India.
Traumatic stab injury/wounds to the brain are rare type of injuries having fatal outcomes. In the present case report, we report a case of a 17-year-old male who presented to the accident and emergency department of our hospital with an alleged history of assault due to a vegetable cutting knife with the knife lying in the right temporal region. In these types of injuries, no attempt should be made to remove the weapon without adequate investigations and facilities as it can be fatal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld Neurosurg
July 2019
Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Pretoria, Steve Biko Academic Hospital, Pretoria, South Africa.
Background: We describe endovascular coil embolization of the internal carotid artery before removing a retained knife blade partially occluding the lacerum segment of the internal carotid artery.
Case Description: A 21-year-old male presented to the emergency department with a retained transcranial knife after sustaining a stab to the left temporal scalp. He was hemodynamically stable and neurologically intact on presentation.
Exp Neurol
September 2017
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Hwy, Perth, WA, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia. Electronic address:
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), a non-invasive form of brain stimulation, has shown experimental and clinical efficacy in a range of neuromodulatory models, even when delivered at low intensity (i.e. subthreshold for action potential generation).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Craniofac Surg
January 2017
*Department of Neurosurgery, ONO Hospital, Ibn Sina University Hospital Center †Department of Maxillofacial Surgery, ONO Hospital, Ibn Sina University Hospital Center ‡Department of Plastic Surgery, Mohammed Vth University, Rabat, Morocco..
A 58-year-old man presented to the neurosurgical emergencies for a transzygomatic transcranial stab wound with a retained broken knife. The patient was neurologically intact. After radiographic evaluation the knife was found to be penetrating the temporal lobe, neighboring the intracavernous portion of the carotid artery.
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