Self-induced Hot Water Finger Burn Trying to Get Feeling Back after Ropivacaine Block.

Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open

Division of Plastic Surgery, Dalhousie University, Saint John, Canada.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A patient developed severe hot water burns after undergoing an infraclavicular block for a scaphoid fracture, highlighting the issue of self-induced injuries that may go unreported.
  • Some individuals may be too embarrassed to admit their injuries, which can lead to misdiagnosis by healthcare professionals if the full history is not disclosed.
  • The article aims to educate medical staff on recognizing key signs of self-induced hot water burns to ensure accurate diagnosis and treatment, including identifying the burn lines, hyperemia, and blisters.

Article Abstract

This case report is about a patient with self-induced hot water burns several hours after an infraclavicular block with ropivacaine for a scaphoid fracture operation. This patient was honest about what happened. However, some patients are too embarrassed to admit what they did to themselves. The injury may be misdiagnosed by the emergency department physician or by the surgeon because the history is incomplete. The resulting burn, which can lead to fingertip loss when severe, can be erroneously misdiagnosed as an ischemic injury after lidocaine with epinephrine local anesthesia. Most hand surgeons have seen ischemic finger injuries the morning after failed finger replantation. Acutely ischemic fingers from arterial insufficiency do not have parallel hot water burn lines, reactive hyperemia at the base of the burn, or burn blisters at the fingertips. The purpose of this article and its video is to help physicians and nurses recognize the three signs of self-induced hot water finger burns after local anesthesia: (1) a parallel hot water line in the fingers at the proximal burn level; (2) reactive hyperemia just proximal to the burn line; (3) burn blisters in the submerged fingertips. When seeing postoperative patients with these signs, the examining clinician may tactfully ask: "Did you try to get the feeling back in your fingers by warming them?" It is hoped that the patient may then reveal that he tried warming the finger in water, and that may lead to the truth that the water was indeed too hot.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11000765PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000005704DOI Listing

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