AI Article Synopsis

  • Craniofacial penetrating injuries are not common but can involve unusual foreign objects like lunch boxes or wooden branches, leading to severe damage in delicate areas of the head and neck.
  • The report details three cases of such injuries, highlighting the types and severities, with two requiring immediate surgical intervention and one affecting a young child, illustrating the unique challenges posed by these foreign bodies.
  • Effective management of these injuries involves a multidisciplinary approach, emphasizing the need for specialized surgical planning, careful diagnosis, and thorough clinical assessment to ensure successful treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Craniofacial penetrating injuries are not a rare sight in the career of oral and maxillofacial surgeons and trainees, but bizarre craniomaxillofacial sharp injuries caused by peculiar foreign bodies to the head and neck region, complicating and obscuring the vital structures, are seldom found. Foreign bodies such as lunch boxes, wooden branches or twigs are peculiarly associated with penetrating/perforating craniofacial severe impaled injuries with dramatic consequences.

Case Report: Three cases are reported, with elaborate descriptions of the site, kind, and severity of the injuries. Cases 1 and 3, wooden impalement injuries into the neck region and sensitive orbital region, respectively, necessitating immediate surgical retrieval as in both cases. In case 2, 4-year old sustained an injury with a sharp rim of the lunch box, obscuring the entire craniofacial region and impeding the primary care and assessment.Cases represent the peculiarity of the injuries caused by unusual foreign bodies and how their uniqueness demanded a different surgical intervention.The need for a multidisciplinary approach is crucial to managing these injuries in areas with a high degree of specialization overlap, such as the craniofacial region.

Conclusion: We give an overview of the diagnosis and treatment of penetrating foreign body trauma encountered in our department. Every foreign body penetrating trauma demands a formulation of a different surgical plan and stands as a challenge for the treating surgeons. Adequate radiology knowledge, detection, vigilant clinical assessment, and tension-free closure are a few of the important aspects for the ideal management of penetrating foreign body trauma.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11303601PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12663-024-02152-1DOI Listing

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